scholarly journals Combined integral and particle model for describing the dispersion, dilution, terminal layer formation and influence area from a point source discharge into a water body

Author(s):  
Jonathan Johnsplass ◽  
Anja Celine Winger ◽  
Anders Bjørgesæter ◽  
Marit Kleven ◽  
Julie Damsgaard Jensen

AbstractContamination of coastal water is a persistent threat to ecosystems around the world. In this study, a novel model for describing the dispersion, dilution, terminal layer formation and influence area from a point source discharge into a water body is presented and compared with field measured data. The model is a Combined Integral and Particle model (CIPMO). In the initial stage, the motion, dispersion and dilution of a buoyant jet are calculated. The output from the buoyant jet model is then coupled with a Lagrangian Advection and Diffusion model describing the far-field. CIPMO ensures that both the near- and far-field processes are adequately resolved. The model either uses empirical data or collects environmental forcing data from open source hydrodynamic models with high spatial and temporal resolution. The method for coupling the near-field buoyant jet and the particle tracking model is described and the output is discussed. The model shows good results when compared with measurements from a field study.

2016 ◽  
Vol 73 (9) ◽  
pp. 2408-2419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond J. Bannister ◽  
Ingrid A. Johnsen ◽  
Pia K. Hansen ◽  
Tina Kutti ◽  
Lars Asplin

Abstract The ability to achieve environmentally sustainable Atlantic salmon aquaculture in coastal fjord ecosystems is currently constrained by our limited knowledge of the regional interactions and fate of organic effluents on benthic ecosystems. A first step in addressing this limitation is to establish predictive modelling tools to better understand local and regional dispersion of organic effluents in the wider ecosystem. By combining settling velocity of faecal waste from different sizes of Atlantic salmon, a three-dimensional hydrodynamic model coupled with a particle tracking model and farm management data, this study presents a first-generation generic near- and far-field effluent dispersion model to predict the spread of particulate organic waste into fjord ecosystems. Simulations predict that >75% of organic effluents are dispersed to near-field sites (<500 m from the release point), while a small proportion of particulate organic effluents (up to 2.7%) are dispersed to far-field sites (>2 km). These simulations indicate that organic effluents from fish farms may be dispersed over large areas of fjord systems. The input of measured “mass fractions” settling velocities of faecal waste from different sizes of Atlantic salmon ensured that modelled predictions of near and far-field dispersion of organic material over a production cycle were in the range of observed POM fluxes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Yousefi ◽  
D. Nečesal ◽  
T. Scharf ◽  
M. Rossi

Abstract We investigate the far-field pattern generation for a micro-lens array (MLA) illuminated under different conditions. Plane wave and Gaussian beam illumination are considered for an MLA with a small diameter of 27 microns and 30 microns period. At these dimensions, the optical effects are governed by diffraction and refraction and sometimes the regime is called the refraction limit. For Gaussian beam illumination, a high contrast dot pattern can be obtained in the far field according to the self-imaging theory for point source illumination and it is investigated in the simulation part. Also, we designed an interference microscopy setup to record both the phase and intensity in near field behind the MLA and also in the far field. The new instrument allows us to change illumination conditions from plane wave to point source. We then experimentally compare the near-field phase modulation and resulting far-field intensity for different conditions. For plane wave illumination, a high contrast pattern is observed in the far field. For the Gaussian beam illumination, the contrast of the far-field pattern depends on the distance of the source and MLA resulting in high contrast and a larger field of view only for particular distances depending on the interference of the Gaussian beam curved phase front and the MLA.


Author(s):  
W. D. Smith

Close to the rupture surfaces of large earthquakes, the pattern of intensity is expected, on physical grounds, to reflect the fault geometry. But there are usually not enough observational data to constrain isoseismals at such short distances. In order to obtain a plausible model to sustain hazard estimation exercises, a simple procedure for evaluating intensities is presented. It involves using a point-source attenuation function to calculate the contribution to the ground motion due to an element of the source, then integrating along the fault trace or, for dipping faults, over the entire rupture surface. In the far field, the intensity so derived is exactly equivalent to that obtained if the entire rupture is represented by a point source.


Computation ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 120
Author(s):  
Isaac Harris

In this paper, we consider the inverse problem of recovering a sound soft scatterer from the measured scattered field. The scattered field is assumed to be induced by a point source on a curve/surface that is known. Here, we propose and analyze new direct sampling methods for this problem. The first method we consider uses a far-field transformation of the near-field data, which allows us to derive explicit bounds in the resolution analysis for the direct sampling method’s imaging functional. Two direct sampling methods are studied, using the far-field transformation. For these imaging functionals, we use the Funk–Hecke identities to study the resolution analysis. We also study a direct sampling method for the case of the given Cauchy data. Numerical examples are given to show the applicability of the new imaging functionals for recovering a sound soft scatterer with full and partial aperture data.


1979 ◽  
Vol 94 (2) ◽  
pp. 275-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerhard H. Jirka ◽  
Donald R. F. Harleman

A plane turbulent buoyant jet discharging vertically into a two-dimensional channel of confined depth is considered. The channel opens at both ends into a large outside reservoir, thus defining a steady symmetrical flow field within the channel. The analysis is aimed at two aspects, the stability and the bulk mixing characteristics of the discharge. A stable discharge configuration is defined as one in which a buoyant surface layer is formed which spreads horizontally and does not communicate with the initial buoyant jet region. On the other hand, the discharge configuration is unstable when a recirculating cell exists on both sides of the jet efflux.It is shown that discharge stability is only dependent on the dynamic interaction of three near-field regions, a buoyant jet region, a surface impingement region and an internal hydraulic jump region. The buoyant jet region is analysed with the assumption of a variable entrainment coefficient in a form corresponding to an approximately constant jet-spreading angle as confirmed by different experimental sources. The properties of surface impingement and internal jump regions are determined on the basis of control volume analyses. Under the Boussinesq approximation, only two dimensionless parameters govern the near-field interaction; these are a discharge densimetric Froude number and a relative depth. For certain parameter combinations, namely those implying low buoyancy and shallow depth, there is no solution to the conjugate downstream condition in the hydraulic jump which would satisfy both momentum and energy conservation principles. Arguments are given which interpret this condition as one which leads to the establishment of a near-field recirculation cell and, thus, discharge instability.The far-field boundary conditions, while having no influence on discharge stability, determine the bulk mixing characteristics of the jet discharge. The governing equations for the two-layered counterflow system in the far field are solved. The strength of the convective transport, and hence the related dilution ratio, is governed by another non-dimensional parameter, the product of the relative channel length and the boundary friction coefficient.Experiments in a laboratory flume, covering a range of the governing parameters, are in excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions, both the stability criterion and the bulk mixing characteristics.


Author(s):  
Mondher Dhaouadi ◽  
M. Mabrouk ◽  
T. Vuong ◽  
A. Ghazel

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