Abstract
Woods Hole Oceanogr. Inst., Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA ISSN 0022-3670 J (Journal-Article) M (Marine) A theory for the vertical migration speed (e) of interfaces within thermohaline staircases is developed and illustrated with several oceanic examples. It expresses e in terms of layer-to-layer variations in the vertical buoyancy flux (J). We discuss three mechanisms which can induce migration: 1) the nonlinearity of the equation of state; 2) layer-merging (the coalescence of adjacent layers); and 3) interface-splitting (the creation of new layers at the interfaces between existing layers). The theory predicts that migration will be much slower for nonlinearity than for layer-merging and interface-splitting, because layer-merging and interface-splitting should lead to large O(1) variations in J, while nonlinearity leads to much smaller O(10 super(-2)) variations. Even so, the net effect of migration associated with layer-merging and int...
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CITATION STYLE
Kelley, D. (1987). Interface Migration in Thermohaline Staircases. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 17(10), 1633–1639. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0485(1987)017<1633:imits>2.0.co;2
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