On internal wave–shear flow resonance in shallow water
The work is concerned with long nonlinear internal waves interacting with a shear flow localized near the sea surface. The study is focused on the most intense resonant interaction occurring when the phase velocity of internal waves matches the flow velocity at the surface. The perturbations of the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of fluid mechanics 1998-01, Vol.354, p.209-237 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The work is concerned with long nonlinear internal waves
interacting with a shear
flow localized near the sea surface. The study is focused on
the most intense resonant
interaction occurring when the phase velocity of internal waves
matches the flow
velocity at the surface. The perturbations of the shear flow are
considered as ‘vorticity
waves’, which enables us to treat the wave–flow
resonance as the resonant wave–wave
interaction between an internal gravity mode and the vorticity mode.
Within the
weakly nonlinear long-wave approximation a system of evolution
equations governing
the nonlinear dynamics of the waves in resonance is derived and
an asymptotic solution to the basic equations is constructed. At resonance
the nonlinearity of the
internal wave dynamics is due to the interaction with the
vorticity mode, while the
wave's own nonlinearity proves to be negligible. The equations
derived are found to
possess solitary wave solutions of different polarities
propagating slightly faster or
slower than the surface velocity of the shear flow. The amplitudes
of the ‘fast’ solitary
waves are limited from above; the crest of the limiting wave forms
a sharp corner.
The solitary waves of amplitude smaller than a certain threshold
are shown to be
stable; ‘subcritical’ localized pulses tend to such
solutions. The localized pulses of
amplitude exceeding this threshold form infinite slopes in
finite time, which indicates wave breaking. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1120 1469-7645 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0022112097007593 |