Significance of Langmuir circulation in upper ocean mixing: Comparison of observations and simulations
Abstract
Representing upper ocean turbulence accurately in models remains a great challenge for improving weather and climate projections. Langmuir circulation (LC) is a turbulent process driven by wind and surface waves that plays a key role in transferring momentum, heat, and mass in the oceanic surface layer. We present a direct comparison between observations and large eddy simulations, based on the wave-averaged Navier-Stokes equation, of an LC growth event. The evolution of cross-wind velocity variance and spatial scales, as well as mixed layer deepening are only consistent with simulations if LC effects are included in the model. Our results offer a validation of the large eddy simulation approach to understanding LC dynamics, and demonstrate the importance of LC in ocean surface layer mixing.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- May 2009
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2009GL037620
- Bibcode:
- 2009GeoRL..3610603K
- Keywords:
-
- Oceanography: Physical: Upper ocean and mixed layer processes;
- Oceanography: Physical: Turbulence;
- diffusion;
- and mixing processes (4490);
- Oceanography: Physical: Air/sea interactions (0312;
- 3339);
- Computational Geophysics: Model verification and validation