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One-dimensional turbulence: Part 2. Staircases in double-diffusive convection
Institution:1. NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, United States;2. Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States;3. School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States;1. Department of Marine Sciences, University of Gothenburg, P.O. Box 460, SE 405 30, Sweden;2. 50 Long Acre, Bingham, Nottingham NG13 8AH, UK;3. Department of Meteorology (MISU), Stockholm University, SE 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;4. Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI), Sven Källfelts gata 15, SE 426 71 Västra Frölunda, Sweden
Abstract:One-Dimensional Turbulence (ODT), a turbulence model implemented as an unsteady simulation, is applied to the diffusive regime of double-diffusive convection. For this application, no parameter adjustment or other empiricism is required. Computed component fluxes across heat–salt and salt–sugar interfaces are consistent with the Linden–Shirtcliffe picture, applicable at intermediate density ratios, and Newell's model of interface evolution at high density ratios. The experimentally observed onset of a variable regime at density ratios below 2 is reproduced. Simulations of interface formation in a bottom-heated salt-stabilized medium indicate that Fernando's scaling for interface stabilization height may also apply to the height of initial interface formation. The simulations generate staircases resembling those seen in laboratory experiments, and suggest a refinement of a scaling inferred from experiments. Computed results for a thermally forced configuration and an unforced, vertically homogeneous configuration are compared.
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