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Charlie A. R. Hogg Galen C. Egan Nicholas T. Ouellette Jeffrey R. Koseff 《Environmental Fluid Mechanics》2018,18(2):383-394
Gravity currents descending along slopes have typically been studied in quiescent environments, despite the fact that in many geophysical settings there is significant externally driven motion. Here we investigate how the head of a gravity current is influenced by interfacial internal waves at the pycnocline of a two-layer ambient water column. Our experimental measurements show that larger amplitude internal waves, interacting with the gravity current, reduce both the mass transport by the gravity current and its thickness. These results suggest that the ambient internal wave field should be considered when estimating transport by gravity currents in geophysical settings with strong internal waves, such as lakes and the coastal ocean. 相似文献
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The spatial development of a passive scalar plume is studied within the inhomogeneous turbulence of a boundary layer flow in a recirculating laboratory flume with a smooth bed. The source of the scalar is located flush with the bed, and the low-momentum source design is intended to simulate a diffusive-type scalar release. A weakly diffusive fluorescent dye is used as the scalar. Planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) techniques were used to record the structure of the plume at a spatial resolution of 150 μm. The measured structure of the mean concentration field is compared to an analytical solution for shear-free, homogeneous turbulence. The laboratory plume exhibits spatial development in the mean concentration field that deviates from the self-similar behavior predicted by the analytical solution; this deviation is due to the mean shear and inhomogeneity of the turbulence. In particular, the influence of the viscous sublayer on the plume development is seen to be significant. Nonetheless, the analytical solution replicates some of the features seen in the laboratory plume, and the solution suggests methods of reducing the laboratory data even for cases where the results deviate from the analysis. We also examine the spatial development of the root-mean-square (rms) fluctuating concentration field, and use scalar probability density functions to examine the relationship between the mean and fluctuating concentrations. 相似文献
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A variety of animals use olfactory appendages bearing arrays of chemosensory neurons to detect chemical signatures in the water or air around them. This study investigates how particular aspects of the design and behavior of such olfactory appendages on benthic aquatic animals affect the patterns of intercepted chemical signals in a turbulent odor plume. We use virtual olfactory `sensors' and `antennules' (arrays of sensors on olfactory appendages) to interrogate the concentration field from an experimental dataset of a scalar plume developing in a turbulent boundary layer. The aspects of the sensors that we vary are: (1) The spatial and temporal scales over which chemical signals arriving at the receptors of a sensor are averaged (e.g., by subsequent neural processing), and (2) the shape and orientation of a sensor with respect to ambient water flow. Our results indicate that changes in the spatial and temporal resolution of a sensor can dramatically alter its interception of the intermittency and variability of the scalar field in a plume. By comparing stationary antennules with those sweeping through the flow (as during antennule flicking by the spiny lobster, Panulirus argus), we show that flicking alters the frequency content of the scalar signal, and increases the likelihood that the antennule encounters peak events. Flicking also enables a long, slender (i.e., one-dimensional) antennule to intercept two-dimensional scalar patterns. 相似文献
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Subhas K. Venayagamoorthy Hyeyun Ku Oliver B. Fringer Alice Chiu Rosamond L. Naylor Jeffrey R. Koseff 《Environmental Fluid Mechanics》2011,11(4):329-352
Marine aquaculture is expanding rapidly without reliable quantification of effluents. The present study focuses on understanding
the transport of dissolved wastes from aquaculture pens in near-coastal environments using the hydrodynamics code SUNTANS
(Stanford Unstructured Nonhydrostatic Terrain-following Adaptive Navier–Stokes Simulator), which employs unstructured grids
to compute flows in the coastal ocean at very high resolution. Simulations of a pollutant concentration field (in time and
space) as a function of the local environment (bathymetry), flow conditions (tides and wind-induced currents), and the location
of the pens were performed to study their effects on the evolution of the waste plume. The presence of the fish farm pens
cause partial blockage of the flow, leading to the deceleration of the approaching flow and formation of downstream wakes.
Results of both the near-field area (area within 10 to 20 pen diameters of the fish-pen site) as well as far-field behavior
of the pollutant field are presented. These detailed results highlight for the first time the importance of the wake vortex
dynamics on the evolution of the near-field plume as well as the rotation of the earth on the far-field plume. The results
provide an understanding of the impact of aquaculture fish-pens on coastal water quality. 相似文献
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