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Abstract Bottom drag is believed to be one of the key mechanisms that remove kinetic energy from the ocean's general circulation. However, large uncertainty still remains in global estimates of bottom drag dissipation. One significant source of uncertainty comes from the velocity structures near the bottom where the combination of sloping topography and stratification can reduce the mean flow magnitude, and thus the bottom drag dissipation. Using high‐resolution numerical simulations, we demonstrate that previous estimates of bottom drag dissipation are biased high because they neglect velocity shear in the bottom boundary layer. The estimated bottom drag dissipation associated with geostrophic flows over the continental slopes is at least 56% smaller compared with prior estimates made using total velocities outside the near‐bottom layer. The diagnostics suggest the necessity of resolving the bottom boundary layer structures in coarse‐resolution ocean models and observations in order to close the global kinetic energy budget.more » « less
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Chor, Tomas; Wenegrat, Jacob O.; Taylor, John (, Journal of Physical Oceanography)Abstract Submesoscale processes provide a pathway for energy to transfer from the balanced circulation to turbulent dissipation. One class of submesoscale phenomena that has been shown to be particularly effective at removing energy from the balanced flow is centrifugal–symmetric instabilities (CSIs), which grow via geostrophic shear production. CSIs have been observed to generate significant mixing in both the surface boundary layer and bottom boundary layer flows along bathymetry, where they have been implicated in the mixing and water mass transformation of Antarctic Bottom Water. However, the mixing efficiency (i.e., the fraction of the energy extracted from the flow used to irreversibly mix the fluid) of these instabilities remains uncertain, making estimates of mixing and energy dissipation due to CSI difficult. In this work we use large-eddy simulations to investigate the mixing efficiency of CSIs in the submesoscale range. We find that centrifugally dominated CSIs (i.e., CSI mostly driven by horizontal shear production) tend to have a higher mixing efficiency than symmetrically dominated ones (i.e., driven by vertical shear production). The mixing efficiency associated with CSIs can therefore alternately be significantly higher or significantly lower than the canonical value used by most studies. These results can be understood in light of recent work on stratified turbulence, whereby CSIs control the background state of the flow in which smaller-scale secondary overturning instabilities develop, thus actively modifying the characteristics of mixing by Kelvin–Helmholtz instabilities. Our results also suggest that it may be possible to predict the mixing efficiency with more readily measurable parameters (viz., the Richardson and Rossby numbers), which would allow for parameterization of this effect.more » « less
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