Bottom Boundary Layer Wave Measurements for Particle Studies

A. Williams
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Suspended particles, which attenuate light and restrict visibility in moderate depths of the ocean, are commonly resuspended from the bottom by waves. This turbid layer initially consists of fine particles with settling rates of 0.01 mm/s that require weeks to settle out. However, the relaxation of the turbid conditions is often only a day or less implying particle settling rates of 1 mm/s, a rate requiring that the small particles aggregate into large particles that can settle more rapidly. Conditions that suspend and possibly disaggregate the fine sediment on the bottom and the aggregated particles in suspension are wave dominated in most continental shelf conditions. Thus formation of a turbid layer requires a shear stress exceeding a threshold. Relaxation of a turbid layer conversely requires a shear stress that remains always or nearly always below another threshold. This dependence of turbidity and the lifetime of turbid layers on shear stress focuses attention on what the shear stress is and what it depends upon. Shear stress at the bottom is a combination of Reynolds stresses from the mean current and the wave boundary layer. The thickness of the wave boundary layer is too small for direct Reynolds stress determinations in the boundary layer but the wave effects can be included into the model in other ways. Thus wave velocities in the wave boundary layer are very important in estimating the mean Reynolds stress. Even more important for the determination of the peak boundary layer stress felt by the bottom interface where the sediment may be eroded and the large particles disaggregated into smaller particles are the instantaneous velocities consisting of the sum of the mean current and the wave velocity. Determination of wave velocity should not be difficult for a rapidly sampling current meter near the bottom. The information required is present in the time series recorded by such an instrument. Yet the waves responsible for this sediment interaction at shelf depths are generally not revealed in conventional directional wave measurement instruments and wave spectra processing programs. Wave measuring instruments that are physically located on the surface or that sense the sea surface elevation acoustically or by wires are even more restricted by the dominance of short period, high amplitude waves when wind is present. Surface wave measurements rarely detect the low amplitude, very long period waves that are the dominant influence on the bottom in depths exceeding 10 meters because these waves are swamped by short period waves in all conditions except glassy calm. In order to adequately measure the waves that are significant for resuspension of benthic sediment, measurements of orbital wave velocity near the bottom in the depths of interest are preferred. While such near-bottom measurements present a problem for extrapolation back to the surface in generation of conventional directional wave spectra, the depth imposes a natural filter that attenuates the signal from short period surface waves yet permits the long period swell to be detected and measured. Direct velocity and pressure measurements from a fixed platform on the bottom are ideal for this purpose. Prefiltering of the data before extrapolating to the surface with a cutoff frequency to reject short period waves can permit conventional directional wave spectral software to reveal these long period waves. No changes need to be made to the directional wave spectrum program when short period waves are naturally attenuated. However, the cutoff must be set to a frequency that prevents the attenuated short period waves from being extrapolated back to the surface where they are dominant. Such a modification of a program will reveal the information needed for studies of turbidity and the relaxation of turbidity on the shelf from depths between 10 meters and 120 meters where long period waves penetrate to the bottom and short period waves are attenuated.
粒子研究的底边界层波测量
悬浮粒子在中等深度的海洋中会减弱光线并限制能见度,它们通常被海浪从海底重新悬浮起来。这种浑浊层最初由细颗粒组成,沉降速率为0.01 mm/s,需要数周才能沉降。然而,浑浊条件的松弛通常只有一天或更短的时间,这意味着颗粒沉降速度为1毫米/秒,这一速度要求小颗粒聚集成可以更快沉降的大颗粒。在大多数大陆架条件下,悬浮和可能分解底部细沉积物和悬浮中的聚集颗粒的条件是波浪主导的。因此,浊层的形成需要超过阈值的剪切应力。相反,浑浊层的松弛需要一个总是或几乎总是低于另一个阈值的剪切应力。浑浊度和浑浊层的寿命对剪切应力的依赖性将注意力集中在剪切应力是什么以及它取决于什么上。底部的剪切应力是来自平均电流和波边界层的雷诺应力的组合。波浪边界层的厚度太小,无法在边界层中直接确定雷诺应力,但可以通过其他方式将波浪效应纳入模型。因此,波边界层的波速对于估计平均雷诺应力是非常重要的。对于确定底面所感受到的边界层应力峰值更为重要的是由平均流速和波速之和组成的瞬时速度。底面是泥沙可能被侵蚀和大颗粒分解成小颗粒的地方。对于靠近海底的快速采样的流速仪,测定波速应该不难。所需的信息存在于这种仪器记录的时间序列中。然而,在传统的定向波测量仪器和波谱处理程序中,通常无法揭示在陆架深度负责这种沉积物相互作用的波。放置在海面上的波浪测量仪器,或者通过声学或电线来感知海面高度的仪器,在有风的情况下,受限于短周期、高振幅的波浪。表面波测量很少探测到低振幅、非常长的周期波,这些波在超过10米深度的海底是主要的影响,因为这些波在除玻璃般平静之外的所有条件下都被短周期波所淹没。为了充分测量对底栖沉积物再悬浮有重要意义的波,最好在感兴趣的深度中测量靠近底部的轨道波速。虽然这种近底测量在生成常规定向波谱时存在外推回地表的问题,但深度施加了一个自然滤波器,可以衰减短周期表面波的信号,但允许检测和测量长周期膨胀。从底部的固定平台直接测量速度和压力是理想的。在用截止频率外推到地面之前,对数据进行预滤波,以抑制短周期波,从而使传统的定向波谱软件能够揭示这些长周期波。当短周期波自然衰减时,不需要改变定向波谱程序。但是,必须将截止频率设置为防止衰减的短周期波被外推回它们占主导地位的表面的频率。这种对程序的修改将揭示研究10米至120米之间的大陆架上浊度和浊度松弛所需的信息,在那里长周期波穿透到底部,短周期波衰减。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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