Abstract
Using experimental measurements, estimates are made of the efficiency of conversion of kinetic energy into potential energy through vertical mixing in a continuously stratified fluid. In the experiments kinetic energy was supplied continuously at a rate of ε to a fundamental internal wave mode in a rectangularly bounded and initially linear stable stratification. Mixing resulted from the instability of this wave and its consequent ‘breaking’. Potential energy was gained by the system at rate , were found to have an average for seven runs of 0·24εM, with a standard deviation for the coefficient of 0·1, and no significant correlation with energy supply rate.These results, the first of their kind to correct for incidental losses, substantiate the values previously assumed in estimates of dissipation and vertical diffusion in the ocean and the atmosphere, and validate the assumption of similarity between buoyancy and mass transfer on which they are based. The efficiency value also agrees with the kinematic prediction for localized homogenization in small discrete volumes made in the companion paper (McEwan 1983). On the basis of that work it is inferred from the present results that the mixing efficiency is only weakly dependent upon Prandtl number provided that this is of order unity or greater.

This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit: