On the Asymptotic Regimes and the Strongly Stratified Limit of Rotating Boussinesq Equations
Author(s) -
Anatoli Babin,
Alex Mahalov,
B. Nicolaenko,
Ye Zhou
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
theoretical and computational fluid dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.817
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1432-2250
pISSN - 0935-4964
DOI - 10.1007/s001620050042
Subject(s) - physics , buoyancy , geostrophic wind , stratification (seeds) , stratified flows , boussinesq approximation (buoyancy) , classical mechanics , mechanics , turbulence , mathematical analysis , mathematics , convection , rayleigh number , stratified flow , natural convection , seed dormancy , germination , botany , dormancy , biology
Asymptotic regimes of geophysical dynamics are described for different Burger number limits. Rotating Boussinesq equations are analyzed in the asymptotic limit of strong stratification in the Burger number of order one situation as well as in the asymptotic regime of strong stratification and weak rotation. It is shown that in both regimes horizontally averaged buoyancy variable is an adiabatic invariant for the full Boussinesq system. Spectral phase shift corrections to the buoyancy time scale associated with vertical shearing of this invariant are deduced. Statistical dephasing effects induced by turbulent processes on inertial-gravity waves are evidenced. The `split'' of the energy transfer of the vortical and the wave components is established in the Craya-Herring cyclic basis. As the Burger number increases from zero to infinity, we demonstrate gradual unfreezing of energy cascades for ageostrophic dynamics. The energy spectrum and the anisotropic spectral eddy viscosity are deduced with an explicit dependence on the anisotropic rotation/stratification time scale which depends on the vertical aspect ratio parameter. Intermediate asymptotic regime corresponding to strong stratification and weak rotation is analyzed where the effects of weak rotation are accounted for by an asymptotic expansion with full control (saturation) of vertical shearing. The regularizing effect of weak rotation differs from regularizations based on vertical viscosity. Two scalar prognostic equations for ageostrophic components (divergent velocity potential and geostrophic departure) are obtained.
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