The evolution of mode-2 internal solitary waves modulated by background shear currents
2018
Abstract. The evolution of mode-2 internal solitary waves (ISWs) modulated
by background shear currents was investigated numerically. The mode-2 ISW was
generated by the “lock-release” method, and the background shear current
was initialized after the mode-2 ISW became stable. Five sets of experiments
were conducted to assess the sensitivity of the modulation process to the
direction, polarity, magnitude, shear layer thickness and offset extent of
the background shear current. Three distinctly different shear-induced waves
were identified as a forward-propagating long wave, oscillating tail and
amplitude-modulated wave packet in the presence of a shear current. The
amplitudes of the forward-propagating long wave and the amplitude-modulated
wave packet are proportional to the magnitude of the shear but inversely
proportional to the thickness of the shear layer, as well as the energy loss
of the mode-2 ISW during modulation. The oscillating tail and
amplitude-modulated wave packet show symmetric variation when the background
shear current is offset upward or downward, while the forward-propagating
long wave was insensitive to it. For comparison, one control experiment was
configured according to the observations of Shroyer et al. (2010); in the
first 30 periods, ∼ 36 % of total energy was lost at an average
rate of 9 W m −1 in the presence of the shear current; it would deplete
the energy of initial mode-2 ISWs in ∼ 4.5 h, corresponding to a
propagation distance of ∼ 5 km, which is consistent with in situ data.
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