Abstract

Coupled mixed convective and stratified systems are common in natural flows. To study experimentally the associated dynamics, we use a singular property of water: its non-linear equation of state is characterised by a maximum density close to $4^{\circ}$C. By heating the top of a tank at $35^{\circ}$C and cooling the bottom at $0^{\circ}$C, a two-layer configuration spontaneously appears. The convective motion in the bottom layer consists mostly of a large-scale circulation and rising cold plumes. This turbulent flow generates propagating internal gravity waves in the upper stably-stratified layer. PIV measurements are performed and spectral characteristics of the convection and internal gravity waves are presented. An horizontal large-scale reversing flow in the stratified layer is observed which is viscously driven by a third, intermediate layer. This buffer layer is located between the convective and stratified layers and is thermally coupled with the convective one, hence sustaining a strong horizontal shear. Three dimensional direct numerical simulations with geometry and physical parameters close to the experimental ones corroborate our experimental results.

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