A Robust Definition for the Turbulent Langmuir Number

Kai H Christensen1, Oyvind Breivik1, Graig Sutherland2, Stephen E Belcher3 and Ann Gargett4, (1)Norwegian Meteorological Institute, Oslo, Norway, (2)University of Oslo, Dept. of Mathematics, Oslo, Norway, (3)University of Reading, Reading, RG6, United Kingdom, (4)Institute of Ocean Sciences, Sidney, BC, Canada
Abstract:
The turbulent Langmuir number combines the water side friction velocity and the surface value of the Stokes drift, and is central to parameterizations of mixing by Langmuir turbulence. Making a direct comparison between such parameterizations and observations is difficult since the surface Stokes drift is sensitive to both the spectral tail and the directional spread of the waves. We propose a new definition for the turbulent Langmuir number based on low order moments of the one-dimensional frequency spectrum, hence eliminating most of the uncertainties associated with the diagnostic spectral tail. Comparison is made between the old and the new definitions using both observed and modeled wave spectra. The new definition has a higher variation around the mean and is better at resolving typical oceanic conditions. In addition, it is backwards compatible with the old definition for monochromatic waves, which means that scalings based on large eddy simulations with monochromatic wave forcing are still valid.