A free surface non-hydrostatic model in cross-sectional form namely two dimensional in the vertical is used to examine the role of larger scale topography, namely sill width and smaller scale topography namely ripples on the sill upon internal wave generation and mixing in sill regions. The present work is set in the context of earlier work, and the wider literature in order to emphasis the problems of simulating mixing in hydrographic models. Highlights from previous calculations, and references to the literature for detail together with new results presented here with smooth and “ripple” topography are used to show that an idealised cross sectional model can reproduce the dominant features found in observations at the Loch Etive sill. Ca...
The problem of resolving or parameterising small-scale processes in oceanographic models and the ext...
The meridional overturning circulation of the global oceans is thought to be a result of an interpla...
Breaking internal waves are an important contributor to mixing in the stratified ocean interior. We ...
A cross sectional non-hydrostatic model of a fjord is used to examine to what extent the internal ti...
A cross-sectional non-hydrostatic model with idealized topography was used to examine the processes ...
A non-hydrostatic model in cross sectional form with idealized topography representing a sill and fo...
A cross-sectional nonhydrostatic model using idealized sill topography is used to examine the influe...
The problem of to what extent two topographic features, namely, adjacent sills in a fjord, interact ...
A non-hydrostatic model in cross-sectional form with an idealized sill is used to examine the influe...
The importance of using a non-hydrostatic model to compute tidally induced mixing and flow in the re...
A three-dimensional non-linear, non-hydrostatic model in cross-sectional form is used to determine t...
The role of water depth and bottom boundary layer turbulence upon lee-wave generation in sill region...
Abstract: A non-hydrostatic terrain following model in cross sectional form is applied to study the ...
the sill’s topography in those regions may affect mixing processes and downstream variability is thu...
We consider the distribution and level of local vertical mixing inside of the Drøbak Sill in the Osl...
The problem of resolving or parameterising small-scale processes in oceanographic models and the ext...
The meridional overturning circulation of the global oceans is thought to be a result of an interpla...
Breaking internal waves are an important contributor to mixing in the stratified ocean interior. We ...
A cross sectional non-hydrostatic model of a fjord is used to examine to what extent the internal ti...
A cross-sectional non-hydrostatic model with idealized topography was used to examine the processes ...
A non-hydrostatic model in cross sectional form with idealized topography representing a sill and fo...
A cross-sectional nonhydrostatic model using idealized sill topography is used to examine the influe...
The problem of to what extent two topographic features, namely, adjacent sills in a fjord, interact ...
A non-hydrostatic model in cross-sectional form with an idealized sill is used to examine the influe...
The importance of using a non-hydrostatic model to compute tidally induced mixing and flow in the re...
A three-dimensional non-linear, non-hydrostatic model in cross-sectional form is used to determine t...
The role of water depth and bottom boundary layer turbulence upon lee-wave generation in sill region...
Abstract: A non-hydrostatic terrain following model in cross sectional form is applied to study the ...
the sill’s topography in those regions may affect mixing processes and downstream variability is thu...
We consider the distribution and level of local vertical mixing inside of the Drøbak Sill in the Osl...
The problem of resolving or parameterising small-scale processes in oceanographic models and the ext...
The meridional overturning circulation of the global oceans is thought to be a result of an interpla...
Breaking internal waves are an important contributor to mixing in the stratified ocean interior. We ...