Ayah Lazar
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Ayah Lazar.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2009
Ayah Lazar; Ehud Nakar; Tsvi Piran
Relativistic Turbulence provides an alternative to internal shocks as a mechanism for producing GRBs’ variable light curves with efficient conversion of energy to radiation. In this model the relativistic outflow is broken into small eddies moving relativistically in the outflow’s rest frame. Variability arises because an observer sees an eddy only when its velocity points towards him and only a small fraction of the eddies are observed. Relativistic turbulence with a significant relativistic velocity requires converting and maintaing a large fraction of the over all energy into turbulent motion. While it is not clear how this is achieved, we explore here, using a toy model, the constraints the model parameters results in light curves comparable to the observations. We find that a tight relation between the size of the eddies and the bulk and turbulent Lorentz factors is needed and that the variability level determines the turbulent Lorentz factor. While the model successfully produces the observed variability there are several inconsistencies with other properties of the light curves. Most of which, but not all, might be resolved if the central engine is active for a long time producing a number of shells, resembling to some extent the internal shocks model.
Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2016
Andrew F. Thompson; Ayah Lazar; Christian E. Buckingham; Alberto C. Naveira Garabato; Gillian M. Damerell; Karen J. Heywood
AbstractThe importance of submesoscale instabilities, particularly mixed layer baroclinic instability and symmetric instability, on upper-ocean mixing and energetics is well documented in regions of strong, persistent fronts such as the Kuroshio and the Gulf Stream. Less attention has been devoted to studying submesoscale flows in the open ocean, far from long-term, mean geostrophic fronts, characteristic of a large proportion of the global ocean. This study presents a year-long, submesoscale-resolving time series of near-surface buoyancy gradients, potential vorticity, and instability characteristics, collected by ocean gliders, that provides insight into open-ocean submesoscale dynamics over a full annual cycle. The gliders continuously sampled a 225 km2 region in the subtropical northeast Atlantic, measuring temperature, salinity, and pressure along 292 short (~20 km) hydrographic sections. Glider observations show a seasonal cycle in near-surface stratification. Throughout the fall (September–November...
Geophysical Research Letters | 2016
Christian E. Buckingham; Alberto C. Naveira Garabato; Andrew F. Thompson; Liam Brannigan; Ayah Lazar; David P. Marshall; A. J. George Nurser; Gillian M. Damerell; Karen J. Heywood; Stephen E. Belcher
A signature of submesoscale flows in the upper ocean is skewness in the distribution of relative vorticity. Expected to result for high Rossby-number flows, such skewness has implications for mixing, dissipation and stratification within the upper ocean. An array of moorings deployed in the Northeast Atlantic for one year as part of the OSMOSIS experiment reveals that relative vorticity is positively skewed during winter even though the scale of the Rossby number is less than 0.5. Furthermore, this skewness is reduced to zero during spring and autumn. There is also evidence of modest seasonal variations in the gradient Rossby number. The proposed mechanism by which relative vorticity is skewed is that the ratio of lateral to vertical buoyancy gradients, as summarized by the inverse gradient Richardson number, restricts its range during winter but less so at other times of the year. These results support recent observations and model simulations suggesting the upper ocean is host to a seasonal cycle in submesoscale turbulence.
Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2017
Madeleine K. Youngs; Andrew F. Thompson; Ayah Lazar; Kelvin J. Richards
Along-stream variations in the dynamics of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) impact heat and tracer transport, regulate interbasin exchange, and influence closure of the overturning circulation. Topography is primarily responsible for generating deviations from zonal-mean properties, mainly through standing meanders associated with regions of high eddy kinetic energy. Here, an idealized channel model is used to explore the spatial distribution of energy exchange and its relationship to eddy geometry, as characterized by both eddy momentum and eddy buoyancy fluxes. Variations in energy exchange properties occur not only between standing meander and quasi-zonal jet regions, but throughout the meander itself. Both barotropic and baroclinic stability properties, as well as the magnitude of energy exchange terms, undergo abrupt changes along the path of the ACC. These transitions are captured by diagnosing eddy fluxes of energy and by adopting the eddy geometry framework. The latter, typically applied to barotropic stability properties, is applied here in the depth–along-stream plane to include information about both barotropic and baroclinic stability properties of the flow. These simulations reveal that eddy momentum fluxes, and thus barotropic instability, play a leading role in the energy budget within a standing meander. This result suggests that baroclinic instability alone cannot capture the dynamics of ACC standing meanders, a challenge for models where eddy fluxes are parameterized.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Christian E. Buckingham; Zammath Khaleel; Ayah Lazar; Adrian P. Martin; John T. Allen; Alberto C. Naveira Garabato; Andrew F. Thompson; Clément Vic
A high-resolution satellite image that reveals a train of coherent, submesoscale (6 km) vortices along the edge of an ocean front is examined in concert with hydrographic measurements in an effort to understand formation mechanisms of the submesoscale eddies. The infrared satellite image consists of ocean surface temperatures at inline image m resolution over the midlatitude North Atlantic (48.69°N, 16.19°W). Concomitant altimetric observations coupled with regular spacing of the eddies suggest the eddies result from mesoscale stirring, filamentation, and subsequent frontal instability. While horizontal shear or barotropic instability (BTI) is one mechanism for generating such eddies (Munks hypothesis), we conclude from linear theory coupled with the in situ data that mixed layer or submesoscale baroclinic instability (BCI) is a more plausible explanation for the observed submesoscale vortices. Here we assume that the frontal disturbance remains in its linear growth stage and is accurately described by linear dynamics. This result likely has greater applicability to the open ocean, i.e., regions where the gradient Rossby number is reduced relative to its value along coasts and within strong current systems. Given that such waters comprise an appreciable percentage of the ocean surface and that energy and buoyancy fluxes differ under BTI and BCI, this result has wider implications for open-ocean energy/buoyancy budgets and parameterizations within ocean general circulation models. In summary, this work provides rare observational evidence of submesoscale eddy generation by BCI in the open ocean.
Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2013
Ayah Lazar; Alexandre Stegner; Eyal Heifetz
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010
Yael Amitai; Yoav Lehahn; Ayah Lazar; Eyal Heifetz
Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2013
Ayah Lazar; Alexandre Stegner; Rui Caldeira; C. Dong; Henri Didelle; Samuel Viboud
Archive | 2013
Andrew F. Thompson; James C. Kinsey; Max Coleman; Rebecca Castaño; Jess F. Adkins; Ayah Lazar
Fluids | 2018
Ayah Lazar; Qiong Zhang; Andrew F. Thompson