Salt fingering: Difference between revisions
From Glossary of Meteorology
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<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">A form of [[double-diffusive convection]] that occurs when warm, salty water overlies cold [[freshwater]].</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">A [[parcel]] of freshwater moved upward will gain heat more quickly than it gains salt and so will become lighter than the surrounding water. It will rise unstably as a result. Salt fingering has been observed in the Caribbean Sea where it gives rise to stable layers hundreds of kilometers in extent. The process transports salt much more efficiently than [[heat]]. <br/>''See also'' [[Turner angle]].</div><br/> </div> | <div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">A form of [[double diffusive convection|double-diffusive convection]] that occurs when warm, salty water overlies cold [[freshwater]].</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">A [[parcel]] of freshwater moved upward will gain heat more quickly than it gains salt and so will become lighter than the surrounding water. It will rise unstably as a result. Salt fingering has been observed in the Caribbean Sea where it gives rise to stable layers hundreds of kilometers in extent. The process transports salt much more efficiently than [[heat]]. <br/>''See also'' [[Turner angle]].</div><br/> </div> | ||
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Latest revision as of 16:49, 25 April 2012
salt fingering
A form of double-diffusive convection that occurs when warm, salty water overlies cold freshwater.
A parcel of freshwater moved upward will gain heat more quickly than it gains salt and so will become lighter than the surrounding water. It will rise unstably as a result. Salt fingering has been observed in the Caribbean Sea where it gives rise to stable layers hundreds of kilometers in extent. The process transports salt much more efficiently than heat.
See also Turner angle.
See also Turner angle.