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1 % $Header: /u/gcmpack/manual/part2/nonlin_visc.tex,v 1.1 2005/10/05 19:52:47 edhill Exp $
2 % $Name: $
3
4 \def\del{{\mathbf \nabla}}
5 \def\av#1{\overline{#1}}
6 \def\pd#1#2{{\frac{\partial{#2}}{\partial#1}}}
7 \def\pds#1#2{{\frac{\partial^2{#2}}{{\partial#1}^2}}}
8 \def\Dt#1{\frac{D{#1}}{Dt}}
9 \def\aDt#1{\frac{\av D{#1}}{\av{Dt}}}
10 \def\d#1{{\,\rm d#1}}
11 \def\Ro{{\rm Ro}}
12 \def\Re{{\rm Re}}
13 \def\Fr{{\rm Fr}}
14 \def\mr{{m_{Ro}}}
15 \def\Mr{{M_{Ro}}}
16 \def\eg{{\emph{e.g.,}\ }}
17 \def\ie{{\emph{i.e.,}\ }}
18 \def\tu{{\tilde u}}
19 \def\tv{{\tilde v}}
20 \def\atu{{\tilde {\av u}}}
21 \def\atv{{\tilde {\av v}}}
22 \def\lesssim{{<\atop\sim}}
23
24
25 \section{Nonlinear Viscosities for Large Eddy Simulation}
26 \label{sect:nonlin-visc}
27
28 In Large Eddy Simulations (LES), a turbulent closure needs to be
29 provided that accounts for the effects of subgridscale motions on the
30 large scale. With sufficiently powerful computers, we could resolve
31 the entire flow down to the molecular viscosity scales
32 {($L_{\nu}\approx 1 \rm cm$)}. Current computation allows perhaps
33 four decades to be resolved, so the largest problem computationally
34 feasible would be about 10m. Most oceanographic problems are much
35 larger in scale, so some form of LES is required, where only the
36 largest scales of motion are resolved, and the subgridscale's effects
37 on the large-scale are parameterized.
38
39 To formalize this process, we can introduce a filter over the
40 subgridscale L: $u_\alpha\rightarrow \av u_\alpha$ and $L:
41 b\rightarrow \av b$. This filter has some intrinsic length and time
42 scales, and we assume that the flow at that scale can be characterized
43 with a single velocity scale ($V$) and vertical buoyancy gradient
44 ($N^2$). The filtered equations of motion in a local Mercator
45 projection about the gridpoint in question (see Appendix for notation
46 and details of approximation) are: \newpage
47 \begin{eqnarray}
48 \aDt \atu- \frac{\atv \sin\theta}{\Ro\sin\theta_0}+\frac{\Mr}{\Ro}\pd{x}{\av\pi}=-\left({\av{\Dt \tu}}-{\aDt \atu}\right)+\frac{\nabla^2{\atu}}{\Re}\label{eq:mercat}\\
49 \aDt\atv+ \frac{\atu\sin\theta}{\Ro\sin\theta_0}+\frac{\Mr}{\Ro}\pd{y}{\av\pi}=-\left({\av{\Dt \tv}}-{\aDt \atv}\right)+\frac{\nabla^2{\atv}}{\Re}\nonumber\\
50 \aDt {\av w} +\frac{\pd{z}{\av\pi}-\av b}{\Fr^2\lambda^2}=-\left(\av{\Dt w}-\aDt {\av{w}}\right)+\frac{\nabla^2\av w}{\Re}\nonumber\\
51 \aDt{\ \av b}+\av w=-\left(\av{\Dt{b}}-\aDt{\ \av b} \right)+\frac{\nabla^2 \av b}{\Pr\Re}\nonumber \\
52 \mu^2\left(\pd x\atu + \pd y\atv \right)+\pd z {\av w} =0\label{eq:cont}
53 \end{eqnarray}
54 Tildes denote multiplication by $\cos\theta/\cos\theta_0$ to account
55 for converging meridians.
56
57 The ocean is usually turbulent, and an operational definition of
58 turbulence is that the terms in parentheses (the 'eddy' terms) on the
59 right of (\ref{eq:mercat}) are of comparable magnitude to the terms on
60 the left-hand side. The terms proportional to the inverse of \Re,
61 instead, are many orders of magnitude smaller than all of the other
62 terms in virtually every oceanic application.
63
64 \subsection{Eddy Viscosity}
65 A turbulent closure provides an approximation to the 'eddy' terms on
66 the right of the preceding equations. The simplest form of LES is
67 just to increase the viscosity and diffusivity until the viscous and
68 diffusive scales are resolved. That is, we approximate:
69 \begin{eqnarray}
70 \left({\av{\Dt \tu}}-{\aDt \atu}\right)\approx\frac{\nabla^2_h{\atu}}{\Re_h}+\frac{\pds{z}{\atu}}{\Re_v}\label{eq:eddyvisc},\qquad
71 \left({\av{\Dt \tv}}-{\aDt \atv}\right)\approx\frac{\nabla^2_h{\atv}}{\Re_h}+\frac{\pds{z}{\atv}}{\Re_v}\nonumber\\
72 \left(\av{\Dt w}-\aDt {\av{w}}\right)\approx\frac{\nabla^2_h\av w}{\Re_h}+\frac{\pds{z}{\av w}}{\Re_v}\nonumber,\qquad
73 \left(\av{\Dt{b}}-\aDt{\ \av b} \right)\approx\frac{\nabla^2_h \av b}{\Pr\Re_h}+\frac{\pds{z} {\av b}}{\Pr\Re_v}\nonumber
74 \end{eqnarray}
75
76 \subsubsection{Reynolds-Number Limited Eddy Viscosity}
77 One way of ensuring that the gridscale is sufficiently viscous (\ie
78 resolved) is to choose the eddy viscosity $A_h$ so that the gridscale
79 horizontal Reynolds number based on this eddy viscosity, $\Re_h$, to
80 is O(1). That is, if the gridscale is to be viscous, then the
81 viscosity should be chosen to make the viscous terms as large as the
82 advective ones. \citet{Bryanetal75} note that a computational mode is
83 squelched by using $\Re_h<$2.
84
85 The MITgcm user can select an horizontal eddy viscosity based on
86 $\Re_h$ by two methods. 1) The user may estimate the velocity scale
87 expected from the calculation and grid spacing and set the {\sf
88 viscAh} to satisfy $\Re_h<2$. 2) The user may use {\sf
89 viscAhReMax}, which ensures that the viscosity is always chosen so
90 that $\Re_h<{\sf viscAhReMax}$. This last option should be used with
91 caution, however, since it effectively implies that viscous terms are
92 fixed in magnitude relative to advective terms. While it may be a
93 useful method for specifying a minimum viscosity with little effort,
94 tests have shown that setting {\sf viscAhReMax}=2
95 \citep[per][]{Bryanetal75} often tends to increase the viscosity
96 substantially over other more 'physical' parameterizations below,
97 especially in regions where gradients of velocity are small (and thus
98 turbulence may be weak), so perhaps a more liberal value should be
99 used, \eg {\sf viscAhReMax}=10.
100
101 While it is certainly necessary that viscosity be active at the
102 gridscale, the wavelength where dissipation of energy or enstrophy
103 occurs is not necessarily $L=A_h/U$. In fact, it is by ensuring that
104 the either the dissipation of energy in a 3-d turbulent cascade
105 (Smagorinsky) or dissipation of enstrophy in a 2-d turbulent cascade
106 (Leith) is resolved that these parameterizations derive their physical
107 meaning.
108
109 \subsubsection{Vertical Eddy Viscosities}
110 Vertical eddy viscosities are often chosen in a more subjective way,
111 as model stability is not usually as sensitive to vertical viscosity.
112 Usually the 'observed' value from finescale measurements, etc., is
113 used (\eg {\sf viscAr}$\approx1\times10^{-4} m^2/s$). However,
114 \citet{Smagorinsky93} notes that the Smagorinsky parameterization of
115 isotropic turbulence implies a value of the vertical viscosity as well
116 as the horizontal viscosity (see below).
117
118 \subsubsection{Smagorinsky Viscosity}
119 \citet{sm63} and \citet{Smagorinsky93} suggest choosing a viscosity
120 that \emph{depends on the resolved motions}. Thus, the overall
121 viscous operator has a nonlinear dependence on velocity. Smagorinsky
122 chose his form of viscosity by considering Kolmogorov's ideas about
123 the energy spectrum of 3-d isotropic turbulence.
124
125 Kolmogorov suppposed that is that energy is injected into the flow at
126 large scales (small $k$) and is 'cascaded' or transferred
127 conservatively by nonlinear processes to smaller and smaller scales
128 until it is dissipated near the viscous scale. By setting the energy
129 flux through a particular wavenumber $k$, $\epsilon$, to be a constant
130 in $k$, there is only one combination of viscosity and energy flux
131 that has the units of length, the Kolmogorov wavelength. It is
132 $L_\epsilon(\nu)\propto\pi\epsilon^{-1/4}\nu^{3/4}$ (the $\pi$ stems
133 from conversion from wavenumber to wavelength). To ensure that this
134 viscous scale is resolved in a numerical model, the gridscale should
135 be decreased until $L_\epsilon(\nu)>L$ (so-called Direct Numerical
136 Simulation, or DNS). Alternatively, an eddy viscosity can be used and
137 the corresponding Kolmogorov length can be made larger than the
138 gridscale, $L_\epsilon(A_h)\propto\pi\epsilon^{-1/4}A_h^{3/4}$ (for
139 Large Eddy Simulation or LES).
140
141 There are two methods of ensuring that the Kolmogorov length is
142 resolved in the MITgcm. 1) The user can estimate the flux of energy
143 through spectral space for a given simulation and adjust grid spacing
144 or {\sf viscAh} to ensure that $L_\epsilon(A_h)>L$. 2) The user may
145 use the approach of Smagorinsky with {\sf viscC2Smag}, which estimates
146 the energy flux at every grid point, and adjusts the viscosity
147 accordingly.
148
149 Smagorinsky formed the energy equation from the momentum equations by
150 dotting them with velocity. \citep[There are some complications when
151 using the hydrostatic approximation, see][]{Smagorinsky93}. The
152 positive definite energy dissipation by horizontal viscosity in a
153 hydrostatic flow is $\nu D^2$, where D is the deformation rate at the
154 viscous scale. According to Kolmogorov's theory, this should be a
155 good approximation to the energy flux at any wavenumber
156 $\epsilon\approx\nu D^2$. Kolmogorov and Smagorinsky noted that using
157 an eddy viscosity that exceeds the molecular value $\nu$ should ensure
158 that the energy flux through viscous scale set by the eddy viscosity
159 is the same as it would have been had we resolved all the way to the
160 true viscous scale. That is, $\epsilon\approx A_{hSmag} \av D^2$. If
161 we use this approximation to estimate the Kolmogorov viscous length,
162 then
163 \begin{eqnarray}
164 L_\epsilon(A_{hSmag})\propto\pi\epsilon^{-1/4}A_{hSmag}^{3/4}\approx\pi(A_{hSmag} \av D^2)^{-1/4}A_{hSmag}^{3/4}=\pi A_{hSmag}^{1/2}\av D^{-1/2}
165 \end{eqnarray}
166 To make $L_\epsilon(A_{hSmag})$ scale with the gridscale, then
167 \begin{eqnarray}
168 A_{hSmag}=\left(\frac{{\sf viscC2Smag}}{\pi}\right)^2L^2|\av D|
169 \end{eqnarray}
170 Where the deformation rate appropriate for hydrostatic flows with
171 shallow-water scaling is
172 \begin{eqnarray}
173 |\av D|=\sqrt{\left(\pd{x}{\av \tu}-\pd{y}{\av \tv}\right)^2+\left(\pd{y}{\av \tu}+\pd{x}{\av \tv}\right)^2}
174 \end{eqnarray}
175 The coefficient {\sf viscC2Smag} is what the MITgcm user sets, and it
176 replaces the proportionality in the Kolmogorov length with an
177 equality. \citet{grha00} suggest values of {\sf viscC2Smag} from 2.2
178 to 4 for oceanic problems. \citet{Smagorinsky93} shows that values
179 from 0.2 to 0.9 have been used in atmospheric modeling.
180
181 \citet{Smagorinsky93} shows that a corresponding vertical viscosity
182 should be used:
183 \begin{eqnarray}
184 A_{vSmag}=\left(\frac{{\sf viscC2Smag}}{\pi}\right)^2H^2\sqrt{\left(\pd{z}{\av \tu}\right)^2+\left(\pd{z}{\av \tv}\right)^2}\nonumber
185 \end{eqnarray}
186 This vertical viscosity is currently not implemented in the MITgcm
187 (although it may be soon).
188
189 \subsubsection{Leith Viscosity}
190 \citet{Leith68,Leith96} notes that 2-d turbulence is quite different
191 from 3-d. In two-dimensional turbulence, energy cascades to larger
192 scales, so there is no concern about resolving the scales of energy
193 dissipation. Instead, another quantity, enstrophy, (which is the
194 vertical component of vorticity squared) is conserved in 2-d
195 turbulence, and it cascades to smaller scales where it is dissipated.
196
197 Following a similar argument to that above about energy flux, the
198 enstrophy flux is estimated to be equal to the positive-definite
199 gridscale dissipation rate of enstrophy $\eta\approx A_{hLeith}
200 |\nabla\av \omega_3|^2$. By dimensional analysis, the
201 enstrophy-dissipation scale is $L_\eta(A_{hLeith})\propto\pi
202 A_{hLeith}^{1/2}\eta^{-1/6}$. Thus, the Leith-estimated length scale
203 of enstrophy-dissipation and the resulting eddy viscosity are
204 \begin{eqnarray}
205 L_\eta(A_{hLeith})\propto\pi A_{hLeith}^{1/2}\eta^{-1/6}=\pi A_{hLeith}^{1/3}|\nabla \av \omega_3|^{-1/3}\\
206 A_{hLeith}=\left(\frac{{\sf viscC2Leith}}{\pi}\right)^3L^3|\nabla \av \omega_3|\\
207 |\nabla\omega_3|\equiv\sqrt{\left[\pd{x}{\ }\left(\pd{x}{\av \tv}-\pd{y}{\av \tu}\right)\right]^2+\left[\pd{y}{\ }\left(\pd{x}{\av \tv}-\pd{y}{\av \tu}\right)\right]^2}
208 \end{eqnarray}
209
210 \subsubsection{Modified Leith Viscosity}
211 The argument above for the Leith viscosity parameterization uses
212 concepts from purely 2-dimensional turbulence, where the horizontal
213 flow field is assumed to be divergenceless. However, oceanic flows
214 are only quasi-two dimensional. While the barotropic flow, or the
215 flow within isopycnal layers may behave nearly as two-dimensional
216 turbulence, there is a possibility that these flows will be divergent.
217 In a high-resolution numerical model, these flows may be substantially
218 divergent near the grid scale, and in fact, numerical instabilities
219 exist which are only horizontally divergent and have little vertical
220 vorticity. This causes a difficulty with the Leith viscosity, which
221 can only responds to buildup of vorticity at the grid scale.
222
223 The MITgcm offers two options for dealing with this problem. 1) The
224 Smagorinsky viscosity can be used instead of Leith, or in conjunction
225 with Leith--a purely divergent flow does cause an increase in
226 Smagorinsky viscosity. 2) The {\sf viscC2LeithD} parameter can be
227 set. This is a damping specifically targeting purely divergent
228 instabilities near the gridscale. The combined viscosity has the
229 form:
230 \begin{eqnarray}
231 A_{hLeith}=L^3\sqrt{\left(\frac{{\sf viscC2Leith}}{\pi}\right)^6|\nabla \av \omega_3|^2+\left(\frac{{\sf viscC2LeithD}}{\pi}\right)^6|\nabla \nabla\cdot \av {\tilde u}_h|^2}\nonumber\\
232 |\nabla \nabla\cdot \av {\tilde u}_h|\equiv\sqrt{\left[\pd{x}{\ }\left(\pd{x}{\av \tu}+\pd{y}{\av \tv}\right)\right]^2+\left[\pd{y}{\ }\left(\pd{x}{\av \tu}+\pd{y}{\av \tv}\right)\right]^2}
233 \end{eqnarray}
234 Whether there is any physical rationale for this correction is unclear
235 at the moment, but the numerical consequences are good. The
236 divergence in flows with the grid scale larger or comparable to the
237 Rossby radius is typically much smaller than the vorticity, so this
238 adjustment only rarely adjusts the viscosity if ${\sf
239 viscC2LeithD}={\sf viscC2Leith}$. However, the rare regions where
240 this viscosity acts are often the locations for the largest vales of
241 vertical velocity in the domain. Since the CFL condition on vertical
242 velocity is often what sets the maximum timestep, this viscosity may
243 substantially increase the allowable timestep without severely
244 compromising the verity of the simulation. Tests have shown that in
245 some calculations, a timestep three times larger was allowed when
246 ${\sf viscC2LeithD}={\sf viscC2Leith}$.
247
248 \subsubsection{Courant--Freidrichs--Lewy Constraint on Viscosity}
249 Whatever viscosities are used in the model, the choice is constrained
250 by gridscale and timestep by the Courant--Freidrichs--Lewy (CFL)
251 constraint on stability:
252 \begin{eqnarray}
253 A_h<\frac{L^2}{4\Delta t}\nonumber\\
254 A_4 \le \frac{L^4}{32\Delta t}\nonumber
255 %% A_4\lesssim\frac{L^4}{32\Delta t}\nonumber
256 \end{eqnarray}
257 The viscosities may be automatically limited to be no greater than
258 these values in the MITgcm by specifying {\sf viscAhGridMax}$<1$ and
259 {\sf viscA4GridMax}$<1$. Similarly-scaled minimum values of
260 viscosities are provided by {\sf viscAhGridMin} and {\sf
261 viscA4GridMin}, which if used, should be set to values $\ll 1$. $L$
262 is roughly the gridscale (see below).
263
264 Following \citet{grha00}, we note that there is a factor of $\Delta
265 x^2/8$ difference between the harmonic and biharmonic viscosities.
266 Thus, whenever a non-dimensional harmonic coefficient is used in the
267 MITgcm (\eg {\sf viscAhGridMax}$<1$), the biharmonic equivalent is
268 scaled so that the same non-dimensional value can be used (\eg {\sf
269 viscA4GridMax}$<1$).
270
271 \subsubsection{Biharmonic Viscosity}
272 \citet{ho78} suggested that eddy viscosities ought to be focuses on
273 the dynamics at the grid scale, as larger motions would be 'resolved'.
274 To enhance the scale selectivity of the viscous operator, he suggested
275 a biharmonic eddy viscosity instead of a harmonic (or Laplacian)
276 viscosity:
277 \begin{eqnarray}
278 \left({\av{\Dt \tu}}-{\aDt \atu}\right)\approx\frac{-\nabla^4_h{\atu}}{\Re_4}+\frac{\pds{z}{\atu}}{\Re_v}\label{eq:bieddyvisc},\qquad
279 \left({\av{\Dt \tv}}-{\aDt \atv}\right)\approx\frac{-\nabla^4_h{\atv}}{\Re_4}+\frac{\pds{z}{\atv}}{\Re_v}\nonumber\\
280 \left(\av{\Dt w}-\aDt {\av{w}}\right)\approx\frac{-\nabla^4_h\av w}{\Re_4}+\frac{\pds{z}{\av w}}{\Re_v}\nonumber,\qquad
281 \left(\av{\Dt{b}}-\aDt{\ \av b} \right)\approx\frac{-\nabla^4_h \av b}{\Pr\Re_4}+\frac{\pds{z} {\av b}}{\Pr\Re_v}\nonumber
282 \end{eqnarray}
283 \citet{grha00} propose that if one scales the biharmonic viscosity by
284 stability considerations, then the biharmonic viscous terms will be
285 similarly active to harmonic viscous terms at the gridscale of the
286 model, but much less active on larger scale motions. Similarly, a
287 biharmonic diffusivity can be used for less diffusive flows.
288
289 In practice, biharmonic viscosity and diffusivity allow a less
290 viscous, yet numerically stable, simulation than harmonic viscosity
291 and diffusivity. However, there is no physical rationale for such
292 operators being of leading order, and more boundary conditions must be
293 specified than for the harmonic operators. If one considers the
294 approximations of \ref{eq:eddyvisc} and \ref{eq:bieddyvisc} to be
295 terms in the Taylor series expansions of the eddy terms as functions
296 of the large-scale gradient, then one can argue that both harmonic and
297 biharmonic terms would occur in the series, and the only question is
298 the choice of coefficients. Using biharmonic viscosity alone implies
299 that one zeros the first non-vanishing term in the Taylor series,
300 which is unsupported by any fluid theory or observation.
301
302 Nonetheless, the MITgcm supports a plethora of biharmonic viscosities
303 and diffusivities, which are controlled with parameters named
304 similarly to the harmonic viscosities and diffusivities with the
305 substitution $h\rightarrow 4$. The MITgcm also supports a biharmonic
306 Leith and Smagorinsky viscosities:
307 \begin{eqnarray}
308 A_{4Smag}=\left(\frac{{\sf viscC4Smag}}{\pi}\right)^2\frac{L^4}{8}|D|\nonumber\\
309 A_{4Leith}=\frac{L^5}{8}\sqrt{\left(\frac{{\sf viscC4Leith}}{\pi}\right)^6|\nabla \av \omega_3|^2+\left(\frac{{\sf viscC4LeithD}}{\pi}\right)^6|\nabla \nabla\cdot \av {\bf \tu}_h|^2}\nonumber
310 \end{eqnarray}
311 However, it should be noted that unlike the harmonic forms, the
312 biharmonic scaling does not easily relate to whether
313 energy-dissipation or enstrophy-dissipation scales are resolved. If
314 similar arguments are used to estimate these scales and scale them to
315 the gridscale, the resulting biharmonic viscosities should be:
316 \begin{eqnarray}
317 A_{4Smag}=\left(\frac{{\sf viscC4Smag}}{\pi}\right)^5L^5|\nabla^2\av {\bf \tu}_h|\nonumber\\
318 A_{4Leith}=L^6\sqrt{\left(\frac{{\sf viscC4Leith}}{\pi}\right)^{12}|\nabla^2 \av \omega_3|^2+\left(\frac{{\sf viscC4LeithD}}{\pi}\right)^{12}|\nabla^2 \nabla\cdot \av {\bf \tu}_h|^2}\nonumber
319 \end{eqnarray}
320 Thus, the biharmonic scaling suggested by \citet{grha00} implies:
321 \begin{eqnarray}
322 |D|\propto L|\nabla^2\av {\bf \tu}_h|\\
323 |\nabla \av \omega_3|\propto L|\nabla^2 \av \omega_3|
324 \end{eqnarray}
325 It is not at all clear that these assumptions ought to hold. Only the \citet{grha00} forms are currently implemented in the MITgcm.
326
327 \subsubsection{Selection of Length Scale}
328 Above, the length scale of the grid has been denoted $L$. However, in
329 strongly anisotropic grids, $L_x$ and $L_y$ will be quite different in
330 some locations. In that case, the CFL condition suggests that the
331 minimum of $L_x$ and $L_y$ be used. On the other hand, other
332 viscosities which involve whether a particular wavelength is
333 'resolved' might be better suited to use the maximum of $L_x$ and
334 $L_y$. Currently the MITgcm uses {\sf useAreaViscLength} to select
335 between two options. If false, the geometric mean of $L^2_x$ and
336 $L^2_y$ is used for all viscosities, which is closer to the minimum
337 and occurs naturally in the CFL constraint. If {\sf
338 useAreaViscLength} is true, then the square root of the area of the
339 grid cell is used.
340
341 % The Appendices part is started with the command \appendix;
342 % appendix sections are then done as normal sections
343 % \appendix
344
345 \subsection{Mercator, Nondimensional Equations}
346 The rotating, incompressible, Boussinesq equations of motion
347 \citep{Gill1982} on a sphere can be written in Mercator projection
348 about a latitude $\theta_0$ and geopotential height $z=r-r_0$. The
349 nondimensional form of these equations is:
350 \begin{eqnarray}
351 \Ro\Dt\tu- \frac{\tv \sin\theta}{\sin\theta_0}+\Mr\pd{x}{\pi}+\frac{\lambda\Fr^2\Mr\cos \theta}{\mu\sin\theta_0} w=-\frac{\Fr^2\Mr \tu w}{r/H}+\frac{\Ro{\bf \hat x}\cdot\nabla^2{\bf u}}{\Re}\nonumber\\
352 \Ro\Dt\tv+ \frac{\tu\sin\theta}{\sin\theta_0}+\Mr\pd{y}{\pi}=-\frac{\mu\Ro\tan\theta(\tu^2+\tv^2)}{r/L} -\frac{\Fr^2\Mr \tv w}{r/H}+\frac{\Ro{\bf \hat y}\cdot\nabla^2{\bf u}}{\Re}\nonumber\\
353 \Fr^2\lambda^2\Dt w -b+\pd{z}{\pi}-\frac{\lambda\cot \theta_0 \tu}{\Mr}=\frac{\lambda\mu^2(\tu^2+\tv^2)}{\Mr(r/L)}+\frac{\Fr^2\lambda^2{\bf \hat z}\cdot\nabla^2{\bf u}}{\Re}\nonumber\\
354 \Dt b+w=\frac{\nabla^2 b}{\Pr\Re}\nonumber, \qquad
355 \mu^2\left(\pd x\tu + \pd y\tv \right)+\pd z w =0\nonumber
356 \end{eqnarray}
357 Where
358 \begin{eqnarray}
359 \mu\equiv\frac{\cos\theta_0}{\cos\theta},\qquad\tu=\frac{u^*}{V\mu},\qquad\tv=\frac{v^*}{V\mu} , \qquad \Dt\ \equiv \mu^2\left(\tu\pd x\ +\tv \pd y\ \right)+\frac{\Fr^2\Mr}{\Ro} w\pd z \nonumber \\
360 f_0\equiv2\Omega\sin\theta_0,\qquad x\equiv \frac{r}{L} \phi \cos \theta_0, \qquad y\equiv \frac{r}{L} \int_{\theta_0}^\theta\frac{\cos \theta_0 \d \theta'}{\cos\theta'}, \qquad z\equiv \lambda\frac{r-r_0}{L}\nonumber\\
361 t^*=t \frac{L}{V},\qquad b^*= b\frac{V f_0\Mr}{\lambda},\qquad \pi^*=\pi V f_0 L\Mr,\qquad w^*=w V \frac{\Fr^2\lambda\Mr}{\Ro}\nonumber\\
362 \Ro\equiv\frac{V}{f_0 L},\qquad \Mr\equiv \max[1,\Ro], \qquad \Fr\equiv\frac{V}{N \lambda L}, \qquad \Re\equiv\frac{VL}{\nu}, \qquad \Pr\equiv\frac{\nu}{\kappa}\nonumber
363 \end{eqnarray}
364 Dimensional variables are denoted by an asterisk where necessary. If
365 we filter over a grid scale typical for ocean models ($1m<L<100km$,
366 $0.0001<\lambda<1$, $0.001m/s <V<1 m/s$, $f_0<0.0001 s^{-1}$, $0.01
367 s^{-1}<N<0.0001 s^{-1}$), these equations are very well approximated
368 by
369 \begin{eqnarray}
370 \Ro{\Dt\tu}- \frac{\tv \sin\theta}{\sin\theta_0}+\Mr\pd{x}{\pi}=-\frac{\lambda\Fr^2\Mr\cos \theta}{\mu\sin\theta_0} w+\frac{\Ro\nabla^2{\tu}}{\Re}\nonumber\\
371 \Ro\Dt\tv+ \frac{\tu\sin\theta}{\sin\theta_0}+\Mr\pd{y}{\pi}=\frac{\Ro\nabla^2{\tv}}{\Re}\nonumber\\
372 \Fr^2\lambda^2\Dt w -b+\pd{z}{\pi}=\frac{\lambda\cot \theta_0 \tu}{\Mr}\nonumber+\frac{\Fr^2\lambda^2\nabla^2w}{\Re}\\
373 \Dt b+w=\frac{\nabla^2 b}{\Pr\Re}\nonumber, \qquad
374 \mu^2\left(\pd x\tu + \pd y\tv \right)+\pd z w =0\nonumber\\
375 \nabla^2\approx\left(\frac{\partial^2}{\partial x^2}+\frac{\partial^2}{\partial y^2}+\frac{\partial^2}{\lambda^2\partial z^2}\right)\nonumber
376 \end{eqnarray}
377 Neglecting the non-frictional terms on the right-hand side is usually
378 called the 'traditional' approximation. It is appropriate, with
379 either large aspect ratio or far from the tropics. This approximation
380 is used here, as it does not affect the form of the eddy stresses
381 which is the main topic. The frictional terms are preserved in this
382 approximate form for later comparison with eddy stresses.
383 % \label{}
384
385 % Bibliographic references with the natbib package:
386 % Parenthetical: \citep{Bai92} produces (Bailyn 1992).
387 % Textual: \citet{Bai95} produces Bailyn et al. (1995).
388 % An affix and part of a reference:
389 % \citep[e.g.][Ch. 2]{Bar76}
390 % produces (e.g. Barnes et al. 1976, Ch. 2).
391 %\bibliography{biblio}
392 %\begin{thebibliography}{}
393
394 % \bibitem[Names(Year)]{label} or \bibitem[Names(Year)Long names]{label}.
395 % (\harvarditem{Name}{Year}{label} is also supported.)
396 % Text of bibliographic item
397
398 %\bibitem[]{}
399
400 %\end{thebibliography}
401
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