Abstract

Numerical simulations of benthic gravity-driven currents along continental shelves suggest they exhibit considerable time and spatial variability and tend to organize themselves into large-scale bottom-intensified cold domes or eddies. Attempts to derive simple relations governing the evolution of the spatial moments of the mass equation for baroclinic eddies have failed because it is not clear how to express the form or wave drag stresses associated with the excited (topographic) Rossby wave field in the surrounding fluid in terms of the eddy moments. We develop a simple model for the leading-order time evolution of a cold dome configuration which initially nearly satisfies the Mory–Stern isolation constraint. As the topographic Rossby wave field in the surrounding fluid interacts with the cold dome, higher azimuthal modes are excited within the cold dome which develop into spiral-like filamentary structures on the eddy boundary. The trajectory followed by the position of the maximum height of the cold dome corresponds to sub-inertial along- and cross-slope oscillations superimposed on a mean along-slope drift (well described by the Nof velocity). Nevertheless, the theory suggests that there are no oscillations (at least to second order) in the horizontal spatial moments of the eddy height, that is, the centre of mass of the eddy moves steadily in the along- and down-slope directions (i.e. ‘southwestward’ relative to the topographic β-plane). The theoretical analysis is in good agreement with a nonlinear numerical simulation which we present.

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