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arxiv: 2606.21131 · v1 · pith:JVZTLMRPnew · submitted 2026-06-19 · ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn

Interfacial Roughness Spectra and Finite-Depth Salt-Finger Mixing at a Two-Layer Thermohaline Interface

classification ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn
keywords roughnessfinite-depthmixedsalinityhigh-annulusinterfacelow-modemeasures
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Salt fingering drives diapycnal scalar exchange across thermohaline interfaces that are statically stable but double-diffusively unstable. Oceanic interfaces are finite-depth structures and may carry roughness inherited from waves, shear, intrusions, or prior mixing. We test how the horizontal spectrum of that roughness controls the route from a two-layer interface to a finite-depth salt-finger plume forest. Direct simulations of the modeled Boussinesq equations are performed at $\mathrm{Pr}=7$, $\tau=0.01$, and $\mathrm{R}_\rho=1.2$, with matched domain, grid, amplitude, boundary treatment, and analysis measures. The imposed spectra are high-annulus, low-mode, and mixed; a second mixed realization tests robustness. The imposed spectrum selects distinct routes to vertical exchange. High-annulus roughness remains compact and branch-locked through $t=60$, without a tracked broad-branch transition. Low-mode roughness begins on the broad branch, produces the strongest salinity transport at $t=45$, and reaches the finite-depth boundary region first. Mixed roughness follows a velocity-led pathway: vertical velocity selects the broad branch before salinity, while salinity develops the richest planform spectral population. At $t=45$, the mixed salinity effective mode count is $86.66$, compared with $3.26$ for high-annulus forcing and $5.46$ for low-mode forcing. Angular and signed-branch measures show branch-dependent diagonal organization, and probe/volume measures show that local plume-passage asymmetry does not imply large global upper/lower imbalance. The replicate preserves the mixed route with shifted transition times. Thus a finite-depth thermohaline interface can retain spectral memory, controlling whether salt-finger mixing remains localized, penetrates rapidly, or forms a scalar-rich plume forest through delayed modal handoff.

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