1999
DOI: 10.1038/22295
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Surface effects of bottom-generated turbulence in a shallow tidal sea

Abstract: Turbulence in shelf seas strongly affects the spread of pollution (such as oil spills 1 ) as well as the distribution of sediment 2 and phytoplankton blooms 3 . Turbulence is known to be generated intermittently close to the sea bed 4 , but little is known of its evolution through the water column, or to what extent it affects the surface. Here we present observations of the surface effects of bottom-generated turbulence in a tidally in¯uenced and well mixed region of the North Sea, as derived from acoustic an… Show more

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Cited by 80 publications
(45 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…Nimmo Smith et al (1999) show an example of boils (corresponding to large-scale coherent turbulent flow structures impinging on the free surface) in the North Sea reaching the surface from a 30 m depth and argue that the dispersion of material on the surface due to currents exceeds that due to wind-and wave-driven Langmuir circulation when the current speed is greater than about 2 % of the wind speed. The effect of wall-generated turbulence on a free surface is also important in river re-oxygenation (Moog & Jirka 1999), and for the transport of dissolved matter in partially filled large pipes at high discharge levels (Kumar, Gupta & Banerjee 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Nimmo Smith et al (1999) show an example of boils (corresponding to large-scale coherent turbulent flow structures impinging on the free surface) in the North Sea reaching the surface from a 30 m depth and argue that the dispersion of material on the surface due to currents exceeds that due to wind-and wave-driven Langmuir circulation when the current speed is greater than about 2 % of the wind speed. The effect of wall-generated turbulence on a free surface is also important in river re-oxygenation (Moog & Jirka 1999), and for the transport of dissolved matter in partially filled large pipes at high discharge levels (Kumar, Gupta & Banerjee 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples of such processes are the exchange of low-solubility gases, such as carbon dioxide and oxygen across the atmosphere-ocean interface under conditions of strong tidal forcing (Nimmo Smith, Thorpe & Graham 1999), and the horizontal dispersion of buoyant material (Thorpe et al 1994;Nimmo Smith et al 1999). Nimmo Smith et al (1999) show an example of boils (corresponding to large-scale coherent turbulent flow structures impinging on the free surface) in the North Sea reaching the surface from a 30 m depth and argue that the dispersion of material on the surface due to currents exceeds that due to wind-and wave-driven Langmuir circulation when the current speed is greater than about 2 % of the wind speed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To a lesser extent, but dominated at the same short-term periodicity of ∼50 s, vertical motions concentrated in the lower half of the water column accompany the echo and pressure variations. The motions could be turbulent overturns that are characterized by a horizontal length scale of 0.9 H≈20 m (Nimmo Smith et al 1999). They could also manifest internal waves, as near-bottom stratification can be sufficiently large to support them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Such vigorous turbulence may fill the entire water column with material whirled up from the bottom. The largest sizes of these turbulent motions are about 0.9 times the water depth (Nimmo Smith et al 1999). This turbulence highly depends on the phase of the tidal current and so do stratification, resuspension of material and internal waves.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Boils have been reported for relatively weak stratification in a shallow tidal sea (water depth about 45 m) [3,4]; in a 200-m-deep estuary [5]; over 25-m-deep sand waves [6]; and downstream of 4-m-deep sills [7,8]. Boils have also been reported in association with a headland-induced front [9,10] and with large-amplitude internal waves [11,12]; and boils can be expected to occur in other situations, as well, e.g., in association with upwelling of buoyant outflow water at the edge of an ice shelf.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%