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Interacting internal waves explain global patterns of interior ocean mixing

Giovanni Dematteis, Arnaud Le Boyer, Friederike Pollmann, Kurt L. Polzin, Matthew H. Alford, Caitlin B. Whalen, Yuri V. Lvov

2024Nature Communications18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Across the stable density stratification of the abyssal ocean, deep dense water is slowly propelled upward by sustained, though irregular, turbulent mixing. The resulting mean upwelling determines large-scale oceanic circulation properties like heat and carbon transport. In the ocean interior, this turbulent mixing is caused mainly by breaking internal waves: generated predominantly by winds and tides, these waves interact nonlinearly, transferring energy downscale, and finally become unstable, break and mix the water column. This paradigm, long parameterized heuristically, still lacks full theoretical explanation. Here, we close this gap using wave-wave interaction theory with input from both localized and global observations. We find near-ubiquitous agreement between first-principle predictions and observed mixing patterns in the global ocean interior. Our findings lay the foundations for a wave-driven mixing parameterization for ocean general circulation models that is entirely physics-based, which is key to reliably represent future climate states that could differ substantially from today’s. The authors use interacting internal wave theory and global observational databases to calculate the turbulent energy rate available for ocean mixing, which is a critical metric for climate prediction that is still lacking rigorous understanding.

Topics & Concepts

Internal waveMixing (physics)PhysicsGeologyOceanographyQuantum mechanicsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchMarine and coastal ecosystems