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Equatorial inertial-parametric instability of zonally symmetric oscillating shear flows

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 May 2005

MARC D'ORGEVILLE
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Physique des Océans, IFREMER, BP 70, 29280 Plouzané, France
BACH LIEN HUA
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Physique des Océans, IFREMER, BP 70, 29280 Plouzané, France

Abstract

This study revisits the problem of the zonally symmetric instability on the equatorial $\beta$-plane. Rather than treating the classical problem of a steady basic flow, it treats a sequence of problems of increasing complexity in which the basic flow is oscillatory in time with a frequency $\omega_0$.

First, for the case of a homogeneous fluid, a time-oscillating barotropic shear forcing may excite a subharmonic parametric resonance of inertial oscillations. Because of the continuous distribution of inertial oscillation frequencies, this resonance occurs at critical inertial latitudes $y_c$ such that $\beta y_c {=}{\pm} {\omega_0}/2$. Next the effects of stratification, characterized by Brunt–Väisälä frequency $N$, are taken into account. It is shown analytically (in the asymptotic limit of a weak shear) that the forced temporal oscillation leads to an inertial-parametric instability, when a resonance condition between the basic flow frequency and the sum of two inertio-gravity free-mode frequencies is met. This inertial-parametric instability has a well-defined inviscid vertical scale selection favouring the high-vertical mode $m_c{\sim}7.45m_0$, where $m_0{=}{\beta N}/{\omega_0^2}$ is the equatorial vertical mode characteristic of frequency $\omega_0$. The viscous critical shear of inertial-parametric instability is lower than the steady inertial instability one.

Finally, this type of setting naturally arises when the basic flow is considered to be an equatorial wave, so the problem is recast with the nonlinear adjustment of the vertically sinusoidal basic state of a zonally symmetric mixed Rossby–gravity (MRG) wave. Initial-value numerical simulations show that the same inertial-parametric instability exists leading to a resonant subharmonic excitation of free modes with vertical scales 7 and 8 times smaller than the basic-state wave. A simplified dynamical model of the instability is introduced, demonstrating that the oscillatory nature of the shear with height for the MRG wave necessarily implies a resonance between distinct vertical modes, the most unstable ones being modes 7 and 8 for a large enough Froude number of the MRG wave. The nonlinear action of the instability is described in terms of angular momentum and potential vorticity changes: a significant mixing due to the breaking of the excited high vertical modes creates a vertically averaged westward flow at the equator and extra-equatorial eastward flows. The ideas exposed may play a part in explaining layering phenomena and the latitudinal structure of the zonal flow in the equatorial oceans below the thermocline.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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