Abstract Using an idealized channel representative of a coastal plain estuary, we conducted numerical simulations to investigate the generation of internal lee waves by lateral circulation. It is shown that the lee waves can be generated across all salinity regimes in an estuary. Since the lateral currents are usually subcritical with respect to the lowest mode, mode-2 lee waves are most prevalent but a hydraulic jump may develop during the transition to subcritical flows in the deep channel, producing high energy dissipation and strong mixing. Unlike flows over a sill, stratified water in the deep channel may become stagnant such that a mode-1 depression wave can form higher up in the water column. With the lee wave Froude number above 1 and the intrinsic wave frequency between the inertial and buoyancy frequency, the lee waves generated in coastal plain estuaries are nonlinear waves with the wave amplitude Δ h scaling approximately with , where V is the maximum lateral flow velocity and is the buoyancy frequency. The model results are summarized using the estuarine classification diagram based on the freshwater Froude number Fr f and the mixing parameter M . The Δ h decreases with increasing Fr f as stronger stratification suppresses waves, and no internal waves are generated at large Fr f . The Δ h initially increases with increasing M as the lateral flows become stronger with stronger tidal currents, but decreases or saturates to a certain amplitude as M further increases. This modeling study suggests that lee waves can be generated over a wide range of estuarine conditions.
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Generation of Internal Lee Waves by Lateral Circulation in a Coastal Plain Estuary
Recent mooring observations at a cross-channel section in Chesapeake Bay showed that internal solitary waves regularly appeared during certain phases of a tidal cycle and propagated from the deep channel to the shallow shoal. It was hypothesized that these waves resulted from the nonlinear steepening of internal lee waves generated by lateral currents over channel-shoal topography. In this study numerical modeling is conducted to investigate the interaction between lateral circulation and cross-channel topography and discern the generation mechanism of the internal lee waves. During ebb tides, lateral bottom Ekman forcing drives a counterclockwise (looking into estuary) lateral circulation, with strong currents advecting stratified water over the western flank of the deep channel and producing large isopycnal displacements. When the lateral flow becomes supercritical with respect to mode-2 internal waves, a mode-2 internal lee wave is generated on the flank of the deep channel and subsequently propagates onto the western shoal. When the bottom lateral flow becomes near-critical or supercritical with respect to mode-1 internal waves, the lee wave evolves into an internal hydraulic jump. On the shallow shoal, the lee waves or jumps evolve into internal bores of elevation.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1756155
- PAR ID:
- 10141392
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Physical Oceanography
- Volume:
- 49
- Issue:
- 7
- ISSN:
- 0022-3670
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 1687 to 1697
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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