Two-dimensional evolution of packets of short water waves in systems of finite depth

1981 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 1619 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. W. Laedke
1996 ◽  
Vol 322 ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Ioualalen ◽  
A. J. Roberts ◽  
C. Kharif

A numerical study of the superharmonic instabilities of short-crested waves on water of finite depth is performed in order to measure their time scales. It is shown that these superharmonic instabilities can be significant-unlike the deep-water case-in parts of the parameter regime. New resonances associated with the standing wave limit are studied closely. These instabilities ‘contaminate’ most of the parameter space, excluding that near two-dimensional progressive waves; however, they are significant only near the standing wave limit. The main result is that very narrow bands of both short-crested waves ‘close’ to two-dimensional standing waves, and of well developed short-crested waves, perturbed by superharmonic instabilities, are unstable for depths shallower than approximately a non-dimensional depth d= 1; the study is performed down to depth d= 0.5 beyond which the computations do not converge sufficiently. As a corollary, the present study predicts that these very narrow sub-domains of short-crested wave fields will not be observable, although most of the short-crested wave fields will be.


2017 ◽  
Vol 825 ◽  
pp. 961-1001 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Kozlov ◽  
N. Kuznetsov ◽  
E. Lokharu

We consider the nonlinear problem of steady gravity-driven waves on the free surface of a two-dimensional flow of an inviscid, incompressible fluid (say, water). The water motion is supposed to be rotational with a Lipschitz continuous vorticity distribution, whereas the flow of finite depth is assumed to be unidirectional. We verify the Benjamin–Lighthill conjecture for flows with values of Bernoulli’s constant close to the critical one. For this purpose it is shown that a set of near-critical waves consists only of Stokes and solitary waves provided their slopes are bounded by a constant. Moreover, the subset of waves with crests located on a fixed vertical is uniquely parametrised by the flow force, which varies between its values for the supercritical and subcritical shear flows of constant depth. There exists another parametrisation for this set; it involves wave heights varying between the constant depth of the subcritical shear flow and the height of a solitary wave.


2008 ◽  
Vol 608 ◽  
pp. 197-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOY KO ◽  
WALTER STRAUSS

Two-dimensional, finite-depth periodic steady water waves with variable vorticity ω=γ(ψ) and large amplitude a are computed for a large number of cases. In particular, the effect of a shear layer at the top, the middle or the bottom is considered. The maximum amplitude amax varies monotonically with the vorticity function γ(ċ). It is increasing if the stagnation point is at the crest, and is decreasing if the stagnation point is in the interior of the fluid or on the bottom. Relationships between the amplitude, hydraulic head, depth and mass flux are investigated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Kozlov ◽  
Nikolay Kuznetsov

AbstractSpatial dynamical systems are obtained for two-dimensional steady gravity waves with vorticity on water of finite depth. These systems have Hamiltonian structure and Hamiltonian is essentially the flow–force invariant.


This paper is concerned mainly with incompressible inviscid fluid sheets but the incompressible linearly viscous fluid sheet is also considered. Our development is based on a direct formulation using the two dimensional theory of directed media called Cosserat surfaces . The first part of the paper deals with the formulation of appropriate nonlinear equations (which may include the effects of gravity and surface tension) governing the two dimensional motion of incompressible inviscid media for two categories, namely those ( a ) for two dimensional flows confined to a plane perpendicular to a specified direction and ( b ) for propagation of fairly long waves in a stream of variable initial depth. The latter development is a generalization of an earlier direct formulation of a theory of water waves when the fixed bottom of the stream is level (Green, Laws & Naghdi 1974). In the second part of the paper, special attention is given to a demonstration of the relevance and applicability of the present direct formulation to a variety of two dimensional problems of inviscid fluid sheets. These include, among others, the steady motion of a class of two-dimensional flows in a stream of finite depth in which the bed of the stream may change from one constant level to another, the related problem of hydraulic jumps, and a class of exact solutions which characterize the main features of the time-dependent free surface flows in the three dimensional theory of incompressible inviscid fluids.


1997 ◽  
Vol 07 (06) ◽  
pp. 791-821
Author(s):  
Tatsuo Iguchi

We consider the two-phase problem for two-dimensional and irrotational motion of incompressible ideal fluids in the case that the fluids are separated into the lower and the upper parts by an almost horizontal interface and that there is an almost flat bottom below the lower fluid. It is proved that the Cauchy problem is well-posed, locally in time, in a Sobolev space of finite smoothness, if the surface tension is taken into account and the initial data are suitably close to the equilibrium rest state. The main part of the proof is the reduction of the problem to a quasi-linear system of integro-differential equations for the function defining the interface and the horizontal component of the velocity of the lower fluid on the interface.


2019 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 415-428
Author(s):  
E Dinvay ◽  
N Kuznetsov

Summary A new operator equation for periodic gravity waves on water of finite depth is derived and investigated; it is equivalent to Babenko’s equation considered in Kuznetsov and Dinvay (Water Waves, 1, 2019). Both operators in the proposed equation are nonlinear and depend on the parameter equal to the mean depth of water, whereas each solution defines a parametric representation for a symmetric free surface profile. The latter is a component of a solution of the two-dimensional, nonlinear problem describing steady waves propagating in the absence of surface tension. Bifurcation curves (including a branching one) are obtained numerically for solutions of the new equation; they are compared with known results.


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