Mathematical study of degenerate boundary layers: a large scale ocean circulation problem

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Publication:4645834

DOI10.1090/MEMO/1206zbMATH Open1423.35099arXiv1203.5663OpenAlexW2963805465MaRDI QIDQ4645834FDOQ4645834


Authors: Anne-Laure Dalibard, Laure Saint-Raymond Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 11 January 2019

Published in: Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: This paper is concerned with a complete asymptoticanalysis as mathfrakEo0 of the stationary Munk equation partialxpsimathfrakEDelta2psi=au in a domain OmegasubsetmathbfR2, supplemented with boundaryconditions for psi and partialnpsi. This equation is a simplemodel for the circulation of currents in closed basins, the variablesx and y being respectively the longitude and the latitude. A crudeanalysis shows that as mathfrakEo0, the weak limit of psi satisfiesthe so-called Sverdrup transport equation inside the domain, namelypartialxpsi0=au, while boundary layers appear in the vicinity ofthe boundary.These boundary layers, which are the main center of interest of thepresent paper, exhibit several types of peculiar behaviour. First, thesize of the boundary layer on the western and eastern boundary, whichhad already been computed by several authors, becomes formally verylarge as one approaches northern and southern portions of the boudary,i.e. pieces of the boundary on which the normal is vertical. Thisphenomenon is known as geostrophic degeneracy. In order to avoid suchsingular behaviour, previous studies imposed restrictive assumptionson the domain Omega and on the forcing term au. Here, we provethat a superposition of two boundary layers occurs in the vicinity ofsuch points: the classical western or eastern boundary layers, andsome northern or southern boundary layers, whose mathematicalderivation is completely new. The size of northern/southern boundarylayers is much larger than the one of western boundary layers(mathfrakE1/4 vs. mathfrakE1/3). We explain in detail how the superpositiontakes place, depending on the geometry of the boundary.Moreover, when the domain Omega is not connex in the x direction,psi0 is not continuous in Omega, and singular layers appear inorder to correct its discontinuities. These singular layers areconcentrated in the vicinity of horizontal lines, and thereforepenetrate the interior of the domain Omega. Hence we exhibit some kindof boundary layer separation. However, we emphasize that we remainable to prove a convergence theorem, so that the singular layerssomehow remain stable, in spite of the separation.Eventually, the effect of boundary layers is non-local in severalaspects. On the first hand, for algebraic reasons, the boundary layerequation is radically different on the west and east parts of theboundary. As a consequence, the Sverdrup equation is endowed with aDirichlet condition on the East boundary, and no condition on the Westboundary. Therefore western and eastern boundary layers have in factan influence on the whole domain Omega, and not only near theboundary. On the second hand, the northern and southern boundary layerprofiles obey a propagation equation, where the space variable xplays the role of time, and are therefore not local.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1203.5663




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