Airy Wave Theory
Airy Wave Theory
Airy Wave Theory
In fluid dynamics, Airy wave theory (often referred to as linear wave theory) gives a linearised description of the propagation of gravity waves on the surface of a homogeneous fluid layer. The theory assumes that the fluid layer has a uniform mean depth, and that the fluid flow is inviscid, incompressible and irrotational. This theory was first published, in correct form, by George Biddell Airy in the 19th century.[1] Airy wave theory is often applied in ocean engineering and coastal engineering for the modelling of random sea states giving a description of the wave kinematics and dynamics of high-enough accuracy for many purposes.[2] [3] Further, several second-order nonlinear properties of surface gravity waves, and their propagation, can be estimated from its results.[4] This linear theory is often used to get a quick and rough estimate of wave characteristics and their effects.
Contents
1 Description 2 Mathematical formulation of the wave motion 2.1 Flow problem formulation 2.2 Solution for a progressive monochromatic wave 2.3 Table of wave quantities 3 Surface tension effects 4 Interfacial waves 5 Second-order wave properties 5.1 Table of second-order wave properties 5.2 Wave energy density 5.3 Wave action, wave energy flux and radiation stress 5.4 Wave mass flux and wave momentum 5.4.1 Mass and momentum evolution equations 5.5 Stokes drift 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8.1 Historical 8.2 Further reading 9 External links
Description
Airy wave theory uses a potential flow approach to describe the motion of gravity waves on a fluid surface. The use of inviscid and irrotational potential flow in water waves is remarkably successful, given its failure to describe many other fluid flows where it is often essential to take
viscosity, vorticity, turbulence and/or flow separation into account. This is due to the fact that for the oscillatory part of the fluid motion, waveinduced vorticity is restricted to some thin oscillatory Stokes boundary layers at the boundaries of the fluid domain.[5] Airy wave theory is often used in ocean engineering and coastal engineering. Especially for random waves, sometimes called wave turbulence, the evolution of the wave statistics including the wave spectrum is predicted well over not too long distances (in terms of wavelengths) and in not too shallow water. Diffraction is one of the wave effects which can be described with Airy wave theory. Further, by using the WKBJ approximation, wave shoaling and refraction can be predicted.[2] Earlier attempts to describe surface gravity waves using potential flow were made by, among others, Laplace, Poisson, Cauchy and Kelland. But Airy was the first to publish the correct derivation and formulation in 1841.[1] Soon after, in 1847, the linear theory of Airy was extended by Stokes for non-linear wave motion, correct up to third order in the wave steepness.[6] Even before Airy's linear theory, Gerstner derived a nonlinear trochoidal wave theory in 1804, which however is not irrotational.[1]
Wave characteristics.
Dispersion of gravity waves on a fluid surface. Phase and group velocity divided by (gh) as a function of h/ . A: phase velocity, B: group velocity, C: phase and group velocity (gh) valid in shallow water. Drawn lines: based on dispersion relation valid in arbitrary depth. Dashed lines: based on dispersion relation valid in deep water.
Airy wave theory is a linear theory for the propagation of waves on the surface of a potential flow and above a horizontal bottom. The free surface elevation (x,t) of one wave component is sinusoidal, as a function of horizontal position x and time t:
where a is the wave amplitude in metre, cos is the cosine function, k is the angular wavenumber in radian per metre, related to the wavelength as
is the angular frequency in radian per second, related to the period T and frequency f by
The waves propagate along the water surface with the phase speed cp:
The angular wavenumber k and frequency are not independent parameters (and thus also wavelength and period T are not independent), but are coupled. Surface gravity waves on a fluid are dispersive waves exhibiting frequency dispersion meaning that each wavenumber has its own frequency and phase speed.
Note that in engineering the wave height H the difference in elevation between crest and trough is often used:
Orbital motion under linear waves. The yellow dots indicate the momentary position of fluid particles on their (orange) orbits. The black dots are the centres of the orbits.
Underneath the surface, there is a fluid motion associated with the free surface motion. While the surface elevation shows a propagating wave, the fluid particles are in an orbital motion. Within the framework of Airy wave theory, the orbits are closed curves: circles in deep water, and ellipses in finite depthwith the ellipses becoming flatter near the bottom of the fluid layer. So while the wave propagates, the fluid particles just orbit (oscillate) around their average position. With the propagating wave motion, the fluid particles transfer energy in the wave propagation direction, without having a mean velocity. The diameter of the orbits reduces with depth below the free surface. In deep water, the orbit's diameter is reduced to 4% of its free-surface value at a depth of half a wavelength. In a similar fashion, there is also a pressure oscillation underneath the free surface, with wave-induced pressure oscillations reducing with depth below the free surface in the same way as for the orbital motion of fluid parcels.
Then, due to the continuity equation for an incompressible flow, the potential has to satisfy the Laplace equation:
Boundary conditions are needed at the bed and the free surface in order to close the system of equations. For their formulation within the framework of linear theory, it is necessary to specify what the base state (or zeroth-order solution) of the flow is. Here, we assume the base state is rest, implying the mean flow velocities are zero. The bed being impermeable, leads to the kinematic bed boundary-condition:
In case of deep water by which is meant infinite water depth, from a mathematical point of view the flow velocities have to go to zero in the limit as the vertical coordinate goes to minus infinity: z -. At the free surface, for infinitesimal waves, the vertical motion of the flow has to be equal to the vertical velocity of the free surface. This leads to the kinematic free-surface boundary-condition:
If the free surface elevation (x,t) was a known function, this would be enough to solve the flow problem. However, the surface elevation is an extra unknown, for which an additional boundary condition is needed. This is provided by Bernoulli's equation for an unsteady potential flow. The pressure above the free surface is assumed to be constant. This constant pressure is taken equal to zero, without loss of generality, since the level of such a constant pressure does not alter the flow. After linearisation, this gives the dynamic free-surface boundary condition:
Because this is a linear theory, in both free-surface boundary conditions the kinematic and the dynamic one, equations (3) and (4) the value of and /z at the fixed mean level z = 0 is used.
The associated velocity potential, satisfying the Laplace equation (1) in the fluid interior, as well as the kinematic boundary conditions at the free surface (2), and bed (3), is:
with sinh and cosh the hyperbolic sine and hyperbolic cosine function, respectively. But and also have to satisfy the dynamic boundary condition, which results in non-trivial (non-zero) values for the wave amplitude a only if the linear dispersion relation is satisfied:
with tanh the hyperbolic tangent. So angular frequency and wavenumber k or equivalently period T and wavelength cannot be chosen independently, but are related. This means that wave propagation at a fluid surface is an eigenproblem. When and k satisfy the dispersion relation, the wave amplitude a can be chosen freely (but small enough for Airy wave theory to be a valid approximation).
wave phase
rad
observed
rad /
observed angular frequency intrinsic angular frequency unit vector in the wave propagation direction dispersion relation
rad / s
rad / s
rad / s
phase speed
m/s
group speed
m/s
ratio
horizontal velocity
m/s
vertical velocity horizontal particle excursion vertical particle excursion pressure oscillation
m/s
N/ m2
Main article: Capillary wave Due to surface tension, the dispersion relation changes to:[11]
with the surface tension, with SI units in N/m2. All above equations for linear waves remain the same, if the gravitational acceleration g is replaced by[12]
As a result of surface tension, the waves propagate faster. Surface tension only has influence for short waves, with wavelengths less than a few decimeters in case of a waterair interface. For very short wavelengths two millimeter in case of the interface between air and water gravity effects are negligible.
Interfacial waves
Surface gravity waves are a special case of interfacial waves, on the interface between two fluids of different density. Consider two fluids separated by an interface, and without further boundaries. Then their dispersion relation becomes:[11][13][14]
Dispersion of gravitycapillary waves on the surface of deep water. Phase and group velocity divided by as a function of inverse relative wavelength . Blue lines (A): phase velocity cp, Red lines (B): group velocity cg. Drawn lines: gravitycapillary waves. Dashed lines: deep-water gravity waves. Dash-dot lines: deepwater pure capillary waves.
where and are the densities of the two fluids, below () and above () the interface, respectively. For interfacial waves to exist, the lower layer has to be heavier than the upper one, > . Otherwise, the interface is unstable and a RayleighTaylor instability develops.
Second-order quantities and their dynamics, using results of Airy wave theory quantity mean waveenergy density per unit horizontal area radiation stress or excess horizontal momentum flux due to the wave motion wave action mean massflux due to the wave motion or the wave pseudomomentum mean horizontal masstransport velocity Stokes drift symbol units formula
J / m2
N/m
Js / m2
kg / (ms)
m/s
m/s
wave-energy propagation
J/ (m2s)
J / m2
wave-crest conservation
rad / (ms)
with
kg / (m2s)
N/ m2
The last four equations describe the evolution of slowly-varying wave trains over bathymetry in interaction with the mean flow, and can be derived from a variational principle: Whitham's average Lagrangian method.[16] In the mean horizontal-momentum equation, d(x) is the still water depth, i.e. the bed underneath the fluid layer is located at z = d. Note that the mean-flow velocity in the mass and momentum equations is the mass transport velocity , including the splash-zone effects of the waves on horizontal mass transport, and not the mean Eulerian velocity (e.g. as measured with a fixed flow meter).
with an overbar denoting the mean value (which in the present case of periodic waves can be taken either as a time average or an average over one wavelength in space). The mean kinetic energy density per unit horizontal area Ekin of the wave motion is similarly found to be:[18]
with the intrinsic frequency, see the table of wave quantities. Using the dispersion relation, the result for surface gravity waves is:
As can be seen, the mean kinetic and potential energy densities are equal. This is a general property of energy densities of progressive linear waves in a conservative system.[19][20] Adding potential and kinetic contributions, Epot and Ekin, the mean energy density per unit horizontal area E of the wave motion is:
In case of surface tension effects not being negligible, their contribution also adds to the potential and kinetic energy densities, giving[19]
with the action flux and the group velocity vector. Action conservation forms the basis for many wind wave models and wave turbulence models.[23] It is also the basis of coastal engineering models for the computation of wave shoaling.[24] Expanding the above wave action conservation equation leads to the following evolution equation for the wave energy density:[25]
with: is the mean wave energy density flux, is the radiation stress tensor and is the mean-velocity shear-rate tensor. is the source term describing In this equation in non-conservation form, the Frobenius inner product the energy exchange of the wave motion with the mean flow. Only in case the mean shear-rate is zero, the mean wave energy density E is conserved. The two tensors coordinate system of the form:[26] and are in a Cartesian
with kx and ky the components of the wavenumber vector mean velocity vector .
which is an exact result for periodic progressive water waves, also valid for nonlinear waves.[28] However, its validity strongly depends on the way how wave momentum and mass flux are defined. Stokes already identified two possible definitions of phase velocity for periodic nonlinear waves:[6] Stokes first definition of wave celerity (S1) with the mean Eulerian flow velocity equal to zero for all elevations z below the wave troughs, and Stokes second definition of wave celerity (S2) with the mean mass transport equal to zero. The above relation between wave momentum M and wave energy density E is valid within the framework of Stokes' first definition. However, for waves perpendicular to a coast line or in closed laboratory wave channel, the second definition (S2) is more appropriate. These wave systems have zero mass flux and momentum when using the second definition.[29] In contrast, according to Stokes' first definition (S1), there is a wave-induced mass flux in the wave propagation direction, which has to be balanced by a mean flow U in the opposite direction called the undertow. So in general, there are quite some subtleties involved. Therefore also the term pseudo-momentum of the waves is used instead of wave momentum.[30] Mass and momentum evolution equations For slowly-varying bathymetry, wave and mean-flow fields, the evolution of the mean flow can de described in defined as:[31] terms of the mean mass-transport velocity
Note that for deep water, when the mean depth h goes to infinity, the mean Eulerian velocity become equal. transport velocity The equation for mass conservation is:[16][31]
and mean
where h(x,t) is the mean water-depth, slowly varying in space and time. Similarly, the mean horizontal momentum evolves as:[16][31]
with d the still-water depth (the sea bed is at z=d), and is the dyadic product:
Note that mean horizontal momentum is only conserved if the sea bed is horizontal (i.e. the still-water depth d is a constant), in agreement with Noether's theorem. The system of equations is closed through the description of the waves. Wave energy propagation is described through the wave-action conservation equation (without dissipation and nonlinear wave interactions):[16][21]
The wave kinematics are described through the wave-crest conservation equation:[32]
with the angular frequency a function of the (angular) wavenumber k, related through the dispersion relation. For this to be possible, the wave field must be coherent. By taking the curl of the wave-crest conservation, it can be seen that an initially irrotational wavenumber field stays irrotational.
Stokes drift
Main article: Stokes drift according to linear Airy wave theory the When following a single particle in pure wave motion particles are in closed elliptical orbit. However, in nonlinear waves this is no longer the case and the particles exhibit a Stokes drift. The Stokes drift velocity , which is the Stokes drift after one wave cycle divided by the period, can be estimated using the results of linear theory:[33]
so it varies as a function of elevation. The given formula is for Stokes first definition of wave celerity. When is integrated over depth, the expression for the mean wave momentum is recovered.[33]
See also
Boussinesq approximation (water waves) nonlinear theory for waves in shallow water. Capillary wave surface waves under the action of surface tension Cnoidal wave nonlinear periodic waves in shallow water, solutions of the Kortewegde Vries equation Mild-slope equation refraction and diffraction of surface waves over varying depth
Ocean surface wave real water waves as seen in the ocean and sea Wave power using ocean and sea waves for power generation.
Notes
1. ^ a b c Craik (2004). 2. ^ a b Goda, Y. (2000). Random Seas and Design of Maritime Structures. Advanced Series on Ocean Engineering. 15. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Company. ISBN 981-02-3256-X. OCLC 45200228 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/45200228) . 3. ^ Dean & Dalrymple (1991). 4. ^ Phillips (1977), 3.2, pp. 3743 and 3.6, pp. 6069. 5. ^ Lighthill, M. J. (1986). "Fundamentals concerning wave loading on offshore structures". J. Fluid Mech. 173: 667 681. doi:10.1017/S0022112086001313 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1017%2FS0022112086001313) . 6. ^ a b Stokes (1847). 7. ^ a b c d For the equations, solution and resulting approximations in deep and shallow water, see Dingemans (1997), Part 1, 2.1, pp. 3845. Or: Phillips (1977), pp. 3645. 8. ^ Dean & Dalrymple (1991) pp. 6465 9. ^ The error in the phase speed is less than 0.2% if depth h is taken to be infinite, for h > . 10. ^ The error in the phase speed is less than 2% if wavelength effects are neglected for h <120 . 11. ^ a b Phillips (1977), p. 37. 12. ^ Lighthill (1978), p. 223. 13. ^ Lamb, H. (1994), 267, page 458460. 14. ^ Dingemans (1997), Section 2.1.1, p. 45. 15. ^ See for example: the High seas forecasts (http://www.weather.gov/om/marine/zone/hsmz.htm) of NOAA's National Weather service. 16. ^ a b c d e Whitham, G.B. (1974). Linear and nonlinear waves. Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0 471 94090 9. OCLC 815118 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/815118) ., p. 559. 17. ^ Phillips (1977), p. 2325. 18. ^ a b Phillips (1977), p. 39. 19. ^ a b Phillips (1977), p. 38. 20. ^ Lord Rayleigh (J. W. Strutt) (1877). "On progressive waves". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 9: 2126. doi:10.1112/plms/s1-9.1.21 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1112%2Fplms%2Fs1-9.1.21) . Reprinted as Appendix in: Theory of Sound 1, MacMillan, 2nd revised edition, 1894. 21. ^ a b Phillips (1977), p. 26. 22. ^ Bretherton, F. P.; Garrett, C. J. R. (1968). "Wavetrains in inhomogeneous moving media". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series A 302 (1471): 529554. doi:10.1098/rspa.1968.0034 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1098%2Frspa.1968.0034) . 23. ^ Phillips (1977), pp. 179183. 24. ^ Phillips (1977), pp. 7074. 25. ^ Phillips (1977), p. 66. 26. ^ Phillips (1977), p. 68. 27. ^ Phillips (1977), pp. 3940 & 61. 28. ^ Phillips (1977), p. 40. 29. ^ Phillips (1977), p. 70. 30. ^ McIntyre, M. E. (1978). "On the 'wave-momentum' myth". Journal of Fluid Mechanics 106: 331347. doi:10.1017/S0022112081001626 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1017%2FS0022112081001626) . 31. ^ a b c Phillips (1977), pp. 6163. 32. ^ Phillips (1977), p. 23. 33. ^ a b Phillips (1977), p. 44.
References
Historical
Airy, G. B. (1841). "Tides and waves". In H.J. Rose, et al.. Encyclopaedia Metropolitana. Mixed Sciences. 3. 18171845.. Also: "Trigonometry, On the Figure of the Earth, Tides and Waves", 396 pp. Stokes, G. G. (1847). "On the theory of oscillatory waves". Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 8: 441455. Reprinted in: Stokes, G. G. (1880). Mathematical and Physical Papers, Volume I (http://www.archive.org/details/mathphyspapers01stokrich) . Cambridge University Press. pp. 197229. http://www.archive.org/details/mathphyspapers01stokrich.
Further reading
Craik, A. D. D. (2004). "The origins of water wave theory". Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 36: 128. doi:10.1146/annurev.fluid.36.050802.122118 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1146%2Fannurev.fluid.36.050802.122118) . Dean, R. G.; Dalrymple, R. A. (1991). Water wave mechanics for engineers and scientists. Advanced Series on Ocean Engineering. 2. Singapore: World Scientific. ISBN 978 981 02 0420 4. OCLC 22907242 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22907242) . Dingemans, M. W. (1997). Water wave propagation over uneven bottoms. Advanced Series on Ocean Engineering. 13. Singapore: World Scientific. ISBN 981 02 0427 2. OCLC 36126836 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/36126836) . Two parts, 967 pages. Lamb, H. (1994). Hydrodynamics (6th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978 0 521 45868 9. OCLC 30070401 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30070401) . Originally published in 1879, the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932. Landau, L. D.; Lifshitz, E. M. (1986). Fluid mechanics. Course of Theoretical Physics. 6 (2nd revised ed.). Pergamon Press. ISBN 0 08 033932 8. OCLC 15017127 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/15017127) . Lighthill, M. J. (1978). Waves in fluids. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521292336. OCLC 2966533 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/2966533) . 504 pp. Phillips, O. M. (1977). The dynamics of the upper ocean (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0 521 29801 6. OCLC 7319931 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/7319931) .
External links
Linear theory of ocean surface waves (http://www.wikiwaves.org/index.php/Linear_Theory_of_Ocean_Surface_Waves) on WikiWaves. Water waves (http://web.mit.edu/fluidsmodules/www/potential_flows/LecturesHTML/lec19bu/node1.html) at MIT. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airy_wave_theory" Categories: Physical oceanography | Water waves This page was last modified on 19 October 2010 at 07:35. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for details. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.