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Ren-Chieh Lien

Senior Principal Oceanographer

Affiliate Professor, Oceanography

Email

rcl@uw.edu

Phone

206-685-1079

Research Interests

Turbulence, Internal Waves, Vortical Motions, Surface Mixed Layer and Bottom Boundary Layer Dynamics, Internal Solitary Waves, Small-scale Vorticity, Inertial Waves

Biosketch

Dr. Lien is a physical oceanographer specializing in internal waves, vortical motions, and turbulence mixing in the upper ocean and their effects on upper ocean heat, salinity, momentum, and energy budgets. His primary scientific research interests include: (1) upper ocean internal waves and turbulence, especially in tropical Pacific and Indian oceans, (2) strongly nonlinear internal solitary wave energetics and breaking mechanisms, (3) small-scale vortical motions, and (4) bottom boundary layer turbulence. He is especially interested in understanding the modulation of internal waves and turbulence mixing by large-scale processes, as well as the effects of small-scale processes and large-scale flows.

One of Dr. Lien most important findings is the strong modulation of turbulence mixing by large-scale equatorial processes, such as tropical instability waves and Kelvin waves, in the eastern equatorial Pacific. He is especially interested in small-scale, potential vorticity motions — the vortical mode, which operates on the same scale as internal waves — and their effects on turbulence mixing and stirring. Lien has led sea-going experiments in the Pacific and Indian oceans and the South China Sea, using a variety of instruments including microstructure profilers, Lagrangian floats, EM-APEX floats, and moorings. He also developed a real-time towed CTD chain system, designed to study small-scale water mass variability in the upper ocean at a vertical and horizontal resolution of O(1 m).

Lien mentors and supervises masters and doctoral students and postdocs. His research and experiments have been funded primarily by the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Department Affiliation

Ocean Physics

Education

B.S. Marine Science, Chinese Culture University, 1978

M.S. Physical Oceanography, University of Hawaii, 1986

Ph.D. Physical Oceanography, University of Hawaii, 1990

Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Formation and evolution of turbulence in convectively unstable internal solitary waves of depression shoaling over gentle slopes in the South China Sea

Bolioudakis, T., T. Diamantopoulos, P.J. Diamessis, R.-C. Lien, K.G. Lamb, G. Rivera-Rosario, and G.N. Thomsen, "Formation and evolution of turbulence in convectively unstable internal solitary waves of depression shoaling over gentle slopes in the South China Sea," J. Phys. Oceanogr., 56, 533-559, doi:0.1175/JPO-D-24-0181.1, 2026.

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1 Mar 2026

The shoaling of high-amplitude internal solitary waves (ISWs) of depression in the South China Sea (SCS) is examined through large-scale parallel turbulence-resolving high-accuracy/resolution simulations. A select, near-isobath-normal, bathymetric transect of the gentle SCS continental slope is employed together with stratification and current profiles obtained by in situ measurements. Three simulations of separate ISWs with initial deep-water amplitudes in the range [136, 150 m] leverage a novel wave-tracking capability for a propagation distance of 80 km and accurately reproduce key features of in situ–observed phenomena with significantly higher spatiotemporal resolution. The interplay between convective and shear instability and the associated turbulence formation and evolution as a function of deep-water ISW amplitude are further studied in part revealing processes previously not observed in the field. Across all three waves, the convective instability develops in a similar fashion. Heavier water entrained from the wave rear plunges into its interior, giving rise to transient, yet distinct, subsurface vortical structures. Ultimately, a gravity current is triggered which horizontally advances through the wave interior and mixes it down to pycnocline's base. Although the waveform remains distinctly symmetric, Kelvin–Helmholtz billows emerge near the well-mixed ISW trough, disturb the wave's trailing edge, and give rise to an active wake. The evolution of the kinetic energy associated with fine-scale perturbations to the ISW-induced velocity field shows two different growth regimes, each dominated by either convective or shear instability. The wake's perturbation kinetic energy is nonlinearly dependent on deep-water wave amplitude and can become a sizable fraction of the kinetic energy of the deep-water ISW.

A method of separating linear internal wave and vorticle mode energies using shipboard ADCP velocity measurements

Vladoiu, A., and R.-C. Lien, "A method of separating linear internal wave and vorticle mode energies using shipboard ADCP velocity measurements," J. Atmos. Ocean. Technol., 43, 61-75, doi:10.1175/JTECH-D-25-0076.1, 2026.

1 Jan 2026

Finescale measurements of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities at a Kuroshio seamount

Vladoiu, A., R.-C. Lien, E. Kunze, B. Ma, S. Essink, Y.J. Yang, M.H. Chang, S. Jen, J.L. Chen, K.C. Yang, Y.Y. Yeh, "Finescale measurements of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities at a Kuroshio seamount," J. Phys. Oceanogr., 55, 2097-2117, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-24-0235.1, 2025.

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1 Nov 2025

Finescale properties of Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH)-like shear instabilities on the trailing edge of a nonlinear lee wave generated by the Kuroshio impinging on a seamount were measured using a towed CTD chain, shipboard ADCP, and echosounder. Lee-wave vertical velocity amplitudes vary in phase with the upstream semidiurnal along-stream current. The instabilities are analogous to atmospheric billows induced by a recirculation on the trailing edge of mountain lee waves. A total of 135 KH billows were identified in a 4-day-long time series roughly 300 m downstream of the center of the lee wave. The KH billows have heights H = 52 ±11 m, widths L = 162 ± 72 m, and aspect ratios H/L = 0.39 ± 0.18. Positive reduced shear squared S2 – 4N2 (where S is the vertical shear magnitude and N is the buoyancy frequency) in the shear-stratified billows suggests actively growing instabilities, with comparable contributions from across- and along-flow vertical shear. Billow cores are convectively unstable (N2 < 0). Large turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rates similar to O(10-5)Wkg-1 are inferred from density overturns. Density, shear, and inferred turbulence properties vary with billow aspect ratios. As H/L increases, density gradients smear out. For 122 billows with H/L < 0.6, dissipation rates increase by one order of magnitude with increasing H/L. These observations of similar to 1-m vertical and similar to 5-m horizontal resolution billow structures and density overturn dissipation rates can provide a reference for future high-Reynolds-number direct numerical simulations.

More Publications

Acoustics Air-Sea Interaction & Remote Sensing Center for Industrial & Medical Ultrasound Electronic & Photonic Systems Environmental & Information Systems Ocean Engineering Ocean Physics Polar Science Center
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