scholarly journals Lifetimes of Rogue Wave Events in Direct Numerical Simulations of Deep-Water Irregular Sea Waves

Fluids ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Kokorina ◽  
Alexey Slunyaev

The issue of rogue wave lifetimes is addressed in this study, which helps to detail the general picture of this dangerous oceanic phenomenon. The direct numerical simulations of irregular wave ensembles are performed to obtain the complete accurate data on the rogue wave occurrence and evolution. Purely collinear wave systems, moderately crested, and short-crested sea states have been simulated by means of the high-order spectral method for the potential Euler equations. As rogue waves are transient and poorly reflect the physical effects, we join instant abnormally high waves in close locations and close time moments to new objects, rogue events, which helps to retrieve the abnormal occurrences more stably and more consistently from the physical point of view. The rogue event lifetime probability distributions are calculated based on the simulated wave data. They show the distinctive difference between rough sea states with small directional bandwidth on one part, and small-amplitude sea states and short-crested states on the other part. The former support long-living rogue wave patterns (the corresponding probability distributions have heavy tails), though the latter possess exponential probability distributions of rogue event lifetimes and generally produce much shorter rogue wave events.

1988 ◽  
Vol 1 (21) ◽  
pp. 48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akira Kimura

The probability distribution of the maximum run of irregular wave height is introduced theoretically. Probability distributions for the 2nd maximum, 3rd maximum and further maximum runs are also introduced. Their statistical properties, including the means and their confidence regions, are applied to the verification of experiments with irregular waves in the realization of a "severe sea state" in the test.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saulo Mendes ◽  
Alberto Scotti ◽  
Paul Stansell

<p><strong>(manuscript accepted into Applied Ocean Research https://www.researchgate.net/publication/344786014)</strong></p><p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>Nearly four decades have elapsed since the first efforts to obtain a realistic narrow-banded model for extreme wave crests and heights were made, resulting in a couple of dozen different exceeding probability distributions. These models reflect results of numerical simulations and storm records measured from oil platforms, buoys, and more recently, satellite data. Nevertheless, no consensus has been achieved in either deterministic or operational approaches. Typically, distributions found in the literature analyze a very large set of waves with large variations in sea-state parameters while neglecting homogeneous smaller samples, such that we lack a suitable definition for the sample size and homogeneity of sea variables, also known as sampling variability (Bitner-Gregersen et al., 2020). Naturally, a possible consequence of such sample size inconsistency is the apparent disagreement between several studies regarding the prediction of rogue wave occurrence, as some studies can report less rogue wave heights while others report more rogue waves or the same statistics predicted by Longuet-Higgins (1952), sometimes a combination of the three in the very same study (Stansell, 2004; Cherneva et al., 2005). In this direction, we have obtained a dimensionless parameter capable of measuring how large the deviations in sea state variables can be so that accuracy in wave statistics is preserved.  In particular, we have defined which samples are too heterogeneous to create an accurate description of the uneven distribution of rogue wave likelihood among different storms (Stansell, 2004). Though the literature is rich in physical bounds for single waves, here we describe empirical physical limits for the ensemble of waves (such as the significant steepness) devised to bound these variables within established and prospective wave distributions. Furthermore, this work supplies a combination of sea state parameters that provide guidance on the influence of sea states influence on rogue wave occurrence. Based on these empirical limits, we conjecture a mathematical model for the dependence of the expected maximum of normalized wave heights and crests on the sea state parameters, thus explaining the uneven distribution of rogue wave likelihood among different storms collected by infrared laser altimeters of the North Alwyn oil platform discussed in Stansell (2004). Finally, we demonstrate that for heights and crests beyond 90% of their thresholds (H>2H<sub>1/3</sub> for heights), the exceeding probability becomes stratified, i.e. they resemble layers of probability curves according to each sea state, suggesting the existence of a dynamical definition for rogue waves rather than purely statistical.</p><p> </p><p><strong>References</strong></p><p>Bitner-Gregersen, E. M., Gramstad, O., Magnusson, A., Malila, M., 2020. Challenges in description of nonlinear waves due to sampling variability. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 8, 279.</p><p>Longuet-Higgins, M., 1952. On the statistical distribution of the heights of sea waves. Journal of Marine Research 11, 245–265.</p><p>Stansell, P., 2004. Distribution of freak wave heights measured in the north sea. Appl. Ocean Res. 26, 35–48.</p><p>Cherneva, Z., Petrova, P., Andreeva, N., Guedes Soares, C., 2005. Probability distributions of peaks, troughs and heights of wind waves measured in the black sea coastal zone. Coastal Engineering 52, 599–615.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 893
Author(s):  
Giovanna Vittori ◽  
Paolo Blondeaux ◽  
Marco Mazzuoli

The results of direct numerical simulations of the flow generated in a plane duct by a pressure gradient which is the sum of two terms are described. The first term of the pressure gradient is constant in space but it oscillates in time whereas the second term is constant both in space and in time. Therefore, a pulsating flow is generated, similar to that generated at the bottom of a monochromatic propagating surface wave when nonlinear effects are taken into account. The simulations are carried out for values of the parameters similar to those considered in previous investigations. It is shown that even a small constant pressure gradient influences the flow regime in the bottom boundary layer. In particular, turbulence strength is damped when the steady velocity component has the direction opposite to the oscillating velocity component whereas turbulence strength increases when the steady and oscillating components point in the same direction. Even though the flow is not exactly equal to that generated at the bottom of sea waves, where second order effects in the wave steepness induce a steady streaming in the direction of wave propagation, our results provide information on the interaction of the steady streaming with the oscillatory flow and are also relevant for investigating the dynamics of sediment close to the sea bottom. Indeed, since the turbulent eddies tend to pick-up the sediment from the bottom, it can be inferred that the triggering of turbulence enhances sediment transport towards the shore.


Author(s):  
Jie Zhang ◽  
Michel Benoit ◽  
Olivier Kimmoun ◽  
Hung-Chu Hsu

Freak (or rogue) waves have been a topic of interest in the scientific community for several decades. However, most of the attention has been devoted to the study of these waves in oceanic domains with deep water conditions (see Dysthe et al., 2008). Few papers deal with rogue wave occurrences in coastal areas, in particular considering variable bathymetry. The present work aims at improving the knowledge on the statistics of extreme waves in irregular wave conditions propagating over a sloping bottom profile, through large scale experiments and advanced numerical models.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 1759-1771 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Sergeeva ◽  
A. Slunyaev

Abstract. An approach to the extensive study of rogue wave occurrence in numerical simulations is presented. As a result of numerical simulations of the unidirectional wave evolution, spatio-temporal fields of wave data of the size 20 min × 10 km are obtained with high resolution in time and space and are used for statistical analysis with the focus on extreme waves. Having the exhaustive information on the wave evolution enables us to capture the detailed picture of individual rogue waves; to detect intermittent rogue wave events, which last for a significantly longer time, and hence, to depict the portrait of a rogue wave. Due to the benefit of having full-wave data, the question of relation between extreme wave kinematics and extremely high waves is discussed in the statistical sense.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-72
Author(s):  
A. Sergeeva ◽  
A. Slunyaev

Abstract. An approach to extensive studying rogue wave occurrence in numerical simulations is presented. As a result of numerical simulations of the unidirectional wave evolution, spatio-temporal fields of wave data of the size 20 min × 10 km are obtained with high resolution in time and space and are used for statistical analysis with the focus on extreme waves. Having the exhaustive information on the wave evolution enables us to capture the detailed picture of individual rogue waves; to detect intermittent rogue wave events, which last for significantly longer time, and hence, to draw the image of a rogue wave. Due to the benefit of owing full wave data, the question of relation between extreme wave kinematics and extremely high waves is discussed in the statistical sense.


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