ABSTRACT
The Indonesian seas, with their complex passages and vigorous mixing, constitute the only route and are critical in regulating Pacific-Indian Ocean interchange, air-sea interaction, and global climate events. Previous research employing remote sensing and numerical simulations strongly suggested that this mixing is tidally driven and localized in narrow channels and straits, with only a few direct observations to validate it. The current study offers the first comprehensive temporal microstructure observations in the south of Lombok Strait with a radius of 0.05° and centered on 115.54oE and 9.02oS. Fifteen days of tidal mixing observations measured potential temperature and density, salinity, and turbulent energy dissipation rate. The results revealed significant mixing and verified the remotely sensed technique. The south Lombok temporal and depth averaged of the turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate, and the diapycnal diffusivity from 20 to 250 m are ε = 4.15 ± 15.9) × 10-6 W kg-1 and K ρ = (1.44 ± 10.7) × 10-2 m2s-1, respectively. This K ρ is up to 104 times larger than the Banda Sea [ K ρ = (9.2 ± 0.55) × 10-6 m2s-1] (Alford et al. Geophys Res Lett 26:2741-2744, 1999) or the "open ocean" K ρ = 0.03 × 10-4 m2s-1 within 2° of the equator to (0.4-0.5) × 10-4 m2s-1 at 50°-70° (Kunze et al. J Phys Oceanogr 36:1553-1576, 2006). Therefore, nonlinear interactions between internal tides, tidally induced mixing, and ITF plays a critical role regulating water mass transformation and have strong implications to longer-term variations and change of Pacific-Indian Ocean water circulation and climate. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40562-024-00349-3.
ABSTRACT
Mixing efficiency is the ratio of the net change in potential energy to the energy expended in producing the mixing. Parameterizations of efficiency and of related mixing coefficients are needed to estimate diapycnal diffusivity from measurements of the turbulent dissipation rate. Comparing diffusivities from microstructure profiling with those inferred from the thickening rate of four simultaneous tracer releases has verified, within observational accuracy, 0.2 as the mixing coefficient over a 30-fold range of diapycnal diffusivities. Although some mixing coefficients can be estimated from pycnocline measurements, at present mixing efficiency must be obtained from channel flows, laboratory experiments, and numerical simulations. Reviewing the different approaches demonstrates that estimates and parameterizations for mixing efficiency and coefficients are not converging beyond the at-sea comparisons with tracer releases, leading to recommendations for a community approach to address this important issue.