Two-Dimensional Interaction of Internal Solitary Waves in a Two-Layer Fluid

1993 ◽  
Vol 62 (11) ◽  
pp. 3881-3892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hidekazu Tsuji ◽  
Masayuki Oikawa

The bifurcation of two-dimensional internal solitary waves in a perfect density stratified fluid between horizontal walls under gravity is studied near to a point of incipient eddy formation. It is shown that eddies do not attach to the walls. Moreover, along the bifurcating branch there is always a flow with a singular cusped streamline before the formation of eddies. This flow with the cusped streamline is an example of what we call an internal wave of limiting form, by analogy with the Stokes wave of extreme form in the free surface problem. Two examples are given where the primary density stratification ensures the existence of a limiting wave of depression in one case, and of elevation in the other.


2019 ◽  
Vol 873 ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yangxin He ◽  
Kevin G. Lamb ◽  
Ren-Chieh Lien

Large internal solitary waves with subsurface cores have recently been observed in the South China Sea. Here fully nonlinear solutions of the Dubreil–Jacotin–Long equation are used to study the conditions under which such cores exist. We find that the location of the cores, either at the surface or below the surface, is largely determined by the sign of the vorticity of the near-surface background current. The results of a numerical simulation of a two-dimensional shoaling internal solitary wave are presented which illustrate the formation of a subsurface core.


2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. G. Lamb ◽  
A. Warn-Varnas

Abstract. The interaction of barotropic tides with Luzon Strait topography generates some of the world's largest internal solitary waves which eventually shoal and dissipate on the western side of the northern South China Sea. Two-dimensional numerical simulations of the shoaling of a single internal solitary wave at the site of the Asian Seas International Acoustic Experiment (ASIAEX) have been undertaken in order to investigate the sensitivity of the shoaling process to the stratification and the underlying bathymetry and to explore the influence of rotation. The bulk of the simulations are inviscid; however, exploratory simulations using a vertical eddy-viscosity confined to a near bottom layer, along with a no-slip boundary condition, suggest that viscous effects may become important in water shallower than about 200 m. A shoaling solitary wave fissions into several waves. At depths of 200–300 m the front of the leading waves become nearly parallel to the bottom and develop a very steep back as has been observed. The leading waves are followed by waves of elevation (pedestals) that are conjugate to the waves of depression ahead and behind them. Horizontal resolutions of at least 50 m are required to simulate these well. Wave breaking was found to occur behind the second or third of the leading solitary waves, never at the back of the leading wave. Comparisons of the shoaling of waves started at depths of 1000 and 3000 m show significant differences and the shoaling waves can be significantly non-adiabatic even at depths greater than 2000 m. When waves reach a depth of 200 m, their amplitudes can be more than 50% larger than the largest possible solitary wave at that depth. The shoaling behaviour is sensitive to the presence of small-scale features in the bathymetry: a 200 m high bump at 700 m depth can result in the generation of many mode-two waves and of higher mode waves. Sensitivity to the stratification is considered by using three stratifications based on summer observations. They primarily differ in the depth of the thermocline. The generation of mode-two waves and the behaviour of the waves in shallow water is sensitive to this depth. Rotation affects the shoaling waves by reducing the amplitude of the leading waves via the radiation of long trailing inertia-gravity waves. The nonlinear-dispersive evolution of these inertia-gravity waves results in the formation of secondary mode-one wave packets.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 283-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunxin Yuan ◽  
Roger Grimshaw ◽  
Edward Johnson ◽  
Xueen Chen

AbstractThis paper presents a horizontally two-dimensional theory based on a variable-coefficient Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation, which is developed to investigate oceanic internal solitary waves propagating over variable bathymetry, for general background density stratification and current shear. To illustrate the theory, a typical monthly averaged density stratification is used for the propagation of an internal solitary wave over either a submarine canyon or a submarine plateau. The evolution is essentially determined by two components, nonlinear effects in the main propagation direction and the diffraction modulation effects in the transverse direction. When the initial solitary wave is located in a narrow area, the consequent spreading effects are dominant, resulting in a wave field largely manifested by a significant diminution of the leading waves, together with some trailing shelves of the opposite polarity. On the other hand, if the initial solitary wave is uniform in the transverse direction, then the evolution is more complicated, though it can be explained by an asymptotic theory for a slowly varying solitary wave combined with the generation of trailing shelves needed to satisfy conservation of mass. This theory is used to demonstrate that it is the transverse dependence of the nonlinear coefficient in the Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation rather than the coefficient of the linear transverse diffraction term that determines how the wave field evolves. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) general circulation model is used to provide a comparison with the variable-coefficient Kadomtsev–Petviashvili model, and good qualitative and quantitative agreements are found.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 168781401983835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuqing Li ◽  
Zheyuan Yu ◽  
Yaodeng Chen ◽  
Hongwei Yang

With the development of theory and advancement of scientific research, fractional calculus has begun to be considered as a method for the study of physical systems. In this work, based on the basic system of equations for internal solitary waves, we have derived two-dimensional Benjamin–Ono equation. Then, the integer-order two-dimensional Benjamin–Ono equation is transformed into the time-fractional Benjamin–Ono equation. To study the properties of the algebraic internal solitary waves, we discuss the conservation laws of the new model. Also, using the Hirota bilinear method, the derived new model is solved. Finally, we explore the characteristics of motion of the algebraic internal solitary waves with the help of the multi-soliton solutions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 690 ◽  
pp. 321-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Payam Aghsaee ◽  
Leon Boegman ◽  
Peter J. Diamessis ◽  
Kevin G. Lamb

AbstractWe investigate global instability and vortex shedding in the separated laminar boundary layer beneath internal solitary waves (ISWs) of depression in a two-layer stratified fluid by performing high-resolution two-dimensional direct numerical simulations. The simulations were conducted with waves propagating over a flat bottom and shoaling over relatively mild $(S= 0. 05)$ and steep $(S= 0. 1)$ slopes. Over a flat bottom, the potential for vortex shedding is shown to be directly dependent on wave amplitude, for a particular stratification, owing to increase of the adverse pressure gradient ($\mathrm{d} P/ \mathrm{d} x\gt 0$ for leftward propagating waves) beneath the trailing edge of larger amplitude waves. The generated eddies can ascend from the bottom boundary to as high as 33 % of the total depth in two-dimensional simulations. Over sloping boundaries, global instability occurs beneath all waves as they steepen. For the slopes considered, vortex shedding begins before wave breaking and the vortices, shed from the bottom boundary, can reach the pycnocline, modifying the wave breaking mechanism. Combining the results over flat and sloping boundaries, a unified criterion for vortex shedding in arbitrary two-layer continuous stratifications is proposed, which depends on the momentum-thickness Reynolds number and the non-dimensionalized ISW-induced pressure gradient at the point of separation. The criterion is generalized to a form that may be readily computed from field data and compared to published laboratory experiments and field observations. During vortex shedding events, the bed shear stress, vertical velocity and near-bed Reynolds stress were elevated, in agreement with laboratory observations during re-suspension events, indicating that boundary layer instability is an important mechanism leading to sediment re-suspension.


2010 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 575-584 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Grisouard ◽  
C. Staquet

Abstract. Oceanic observations from the Bay of Biscay, Portugal, Mozambique Channel and Mascarene Ridge have provided evidence of the generation of internal solitary waves due to an internal tidal beam impinging on the thermocline from below – a process referred to as "local generation". Here we present two-dimensional numerical simulations with a fully nonlinear nonhydrostatic model of situations that are relevant for the Bay of Biscay in summer. We show that a beam impinging on a thermocline initially at rest can induce a displacement of the isopycnals, large enough for internal solitary waves to be generated. These internal solitary waves however differ from those observed in the Bay of Biscay through their amplitude and distance between wave trains. We then show that the latter feature is recovered when the background flow around the thermocline as found in the Bay of Biscay is included in the forcing, thereby yielding a more accurate view on the local generation mechanism.


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