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Internal hydraulic control in the Little Belt, Denmark - observations of flow configurations and water mass formation

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Internal hydraulic control in the Little Belt, Denmark - observations of flow configurations and water mass formation. / Nielsen, Morten Holtegaard; Vang, Torben; Lund-Hansen, Lars Chresten.
I: Ocean Science, Bind 13, Nr. 6, 18.12.2017, s. 1061-1075.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avisTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

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@article{aa9a9aba3ffb4066a8e0ff41d9d3011b,
title = "Internal hydraulic control in the Little Belt, Denmark - observations of flow configurations and water mass formation",
abstract = "Internal hydraulic control, which occurs when stratified water masses are forced through an abrupt constriction, plays an enormous role in nature on both large and regional scales with respect to dynamics, circulation, and water mass formation. Despite a growing literature on this subject surprisingly few direct observations have been made that conclusively show the existence of and the circumstances related to internal hydraulic control in nature. In this study we present observations from the Little Belt, Denmark, one of three narrow straits connecting the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. The observations (comprised primarily of along-strait, detailed transects of salinity and temperature; continuous observations of flow velocity, salinity, and temperature at a permanent station; and numerous vertical profiles of salinity, temperature, fluorescence, and flow velocity in various locations) show that internal hydraulic control is a frequently occurring phenomenon in the Little Belt. The observations, which are limited to south-going flows of approximately two-layered water masses, show that internal hydraulic control may take either of two configurations, i.e. the lower or the upper layer being the active, accelerating one. This is connected to the depth of the pycnocline on the upstream side and the topography, which is both deepening and contracting toward the narrow part of the Little Belt. The existence of two possible flow configurations is known from theoretical and laboratory studies, but we believe that this has never been observed in nature and reported before. The water masses formed by the intense mixing, which is tightly connected with the presence of control, may be found far downstream of the point of control. The observations show that these particular water masses are associated with chlorophyll concentrations that are considerably higher than in adjacent water masses, showing that control has a considerable influence on the primary production and hence the ecosystem in the area.",
keywords = "BALTIC SEA TRANSITION, DEEP-WATER, THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION, CONTINENTAL-SHELF, STRATIFIED FLOW, EXCHANGE FLOWS, KNIGHT INLET, SILL, STRAITS, ENTRAINMENT",
author = "Nielsen, {Morten Holtegaard} and Torben Vang and Lund-Hansen, {Lars Chresten}",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
day = "18",
doi = "10.5194/os-13-1061-2017",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "1061--1075",
journal = "Ocean Science",
issn = "1812-0784",
publisher = "Copernicus GmbH",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Internal hydraulic control in the Little Belt, Denmark - observations of flow configurations and water mass formation

AU - Nielsen, Morten Holtegaard

AU - Vang, Torben

AU - Lund-Hansen, Lars Chresten

PY - 2017/12/18

Y1 - 2017/12/18

N2 - Internal hydraulic control, which occurs when stratified water masses are forced through an abrupt constriction, plays an enormous role in nature on both large and regional scales with respect to dynamics, circulation, and water mass formation. Despite a growing literature on this subject surprisingly few direct observations have been made that conclusively show the existence of and the circumstances related to internal hydraulic control in nature. In this study we present observations from the Little Belt, Denmark, one of three narrow straits connecting the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. The observations (comprised primarily of along-strait, detailed transects of salinity and temperature; continuous observations of flow velocity, salinity, and temperature at a permanent station; and numerous vertical profiles of salinity, temperature, fluorescence, and flow velocity in various locations) show that internal hydraulic control is a frequently occurring phenomenon in the Little Belt. The observations, which are limited to south-going flows of approximately two-layered water masses, show that internal hydraulic control may take either of two configurations, i.e. the lower or the upper layer being the active, accelerating one. This is connected to the depth of the pycnocline on the upstream side and the topography, which is both deepening and contracting toward the narrow part of the Little Belt. The existence of two possible flow configurations is known from theoretical and laboratory studies, but we believe that this has never been observed in nature and reported before. The water masses formed by the intense mixing, which is tightly connected with the presence of control, may be found far downstream of the point of control. The observations show that these particular water masses are associated with chlorophyll concentrations that are considerably higher than in adjacent water masses, showing that control has a considerable influence on the primary production and hence the ecosystem in the area.

AB - Internal hydraulic control, which occurs when stratified water masses are forced through an abrupt constriction, plays an enormous role in nature on both large and regional scales with respect to dynamics, circulation, and water mass formation. Despite a growing literature on this subject surprisingly few direct observations have been made that conclusively show the existence of and the circumstances related to internal hydraulic control in nature. In this study we present observations from the Little Belt, Denmark, one of three narrow straits connecting the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. The observations (comprised primarily of along-strait, detailed transects of salinity and temperature; continuous observations of flow velocity, salinity, and temperature at a permanent station; and numerous vertical profiles of salinity, temperature, fluorescence, and flow velocity in various locations) show that internal hydraulic control is a frequently occurring phenomenon in the Little Belt. The observations, which are limited to south-going flows of approximately two-layered water masses, show that internal hydraulic control may take either of two configurations, i.e. the lower or the upper layer being the active, accelerating one. This is connected to the depth of the pycnocline on the upstream side and the topography, which is both deepening and contracting toward the narrow part of the Little Belt. The existence of two possible flow configurations is known from theoretical and laboratory studies, but we believe that this has never been observed in nature and reported before. The water masses formed by the intense mixing, which is tightly connected with the presence of control, may be found far downstream of the point of control. The observations show that these particular water masses are associated with chlorophyll concentrations that are considerably higher than in adjacent water masses, showing that control has a considerable influence on the primary production and hence the ecosystem in the area.

KW - BALTIC SEA TRANSITION

KW - DEEP-WATER

KW - THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION

KW - CONTINENTAL-SHELF

KW - STRATIFIED FLOW

KW - EXCHANGE FLOWS

KW - KNIGHT INLET

KW - SILL

KW - STRAITS

KW - ENTRAINMENT

U2 - 10.5194/os-13-1061-2017

DO - 10.5194/os-13-1061-2017

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 1061

EP - 1075

JO - Ocean Science

JF - Ocean Science

SN - 1812-0784

IS - 6

ER -