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Statistics of Jet Drop Production

Alexis Berny, Stéphane Popinet, Thomas Séon, Luc Deike

2021Geophysical Research Letters34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Bubbles bursting at the ocean surface are an important source of sea‐spray aerosol. We describe jet drop production, from ensembles of high fidelity numerical simulations of bubble bursting, validated against experimental results. The number of jet drops, their size, and velocity are controlled by the ratio of the bubble size, R b , and the visco‐capillary length, , where γ is the surface tension, ρ w , μ w the water density and viscosity. The mean drop size follows and the ejected number of drops , accounting for temperature variations. We confirm that submicrons jet drops are produced by bubbles in the 10–40 microns range. We compute the distribution of jet drops formed by a range of bubbles present under a breaking wave which compares well against laboratory experiments. We discuss the applicability of the proposed formulation in the context of sea spray generation function.

Topics & Concepts

Drop (telecommunication)MechanicsBubbleSurface tensionJet (fluid)Capillary waveWeber numberSea sprayAerosolPhysicsMaterials scienceMeteorologyThermodynamicsTurbulenceReynolds numberTelecommunicationsComputer scienceFluid Dynamics and Heat TransferParticle Dynamics in Fluid FlowsOil Spill Detection and Mitigation
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