Internal wave generation theory: from Lighthill onwards - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2007

Internal wave generation theory: from Lighthill onwards

Résumé

A major landmark in internal wave theory has been the publication in 1978 of the book Waves in Fluids by Sir James Lighthill. With this book, for the first time a general theory of internal wave generation was available, considering the three basic types of forcing (transient, oscilla-tory and travelling) and introducing a single tool for their study (the wavenumber surface, a geometrical representation of the dispersion relation). Before that, only ad hoc approaches had been used, specific to particular problems. Lighthill's theory has since proved invaluable for the analysis of internal wave fields. However, it has met mitigated success for their calculation, owing to analytical complexity and to restriction to the above three types of forcing. Starting from the early 1980s in Russia, an alternative theory has been developed based on the Green's function method, allowing easier implementation and consideration of a greater variety of forcing mechanisms. Suffice it to mention the derivation of the Green's function by Sekerzh-Zen'kovich (1979) and Teodorovich & Gorodtsov (1980), its application to travelling sources by Gorodtsov & Teodorovich (1980, 1981) for uniform translation and Sturova (1980) and Gorodtsov & Teodorovich (1983) for accelerated motion, and to initial disturb-ances by Sekerzh-Zen'kovich (1983). The approach has been extended and systematised later by Voisin (1991a, b, 1994) and is still used and developed to date (Scase & Dalziel 2004, 2006). One type of forcing, though, has resisted investigation: oscillatory forcing, obtained in the la-boratory with oscillating bodies (Gostiaux et al. 2007) and observed in the ocean through ebb and flow of the surface tide over the continental slope, generating the so-called internal tide (Gostiaux & Dauxois 2007). Difficulties arise from the peculiar nature of monochromatic in-ternal waves: the waves propagate in beams, on a St Andrew's cross in two dimensions and on a double cone in three dimensions; the frequency of oscillation determines the inclination of the beams, but not the structure of the waves inside them; this structure is determined by the size and shape of the forcing, the viscosity of the fluid, and the interference with transients generated by the start-up (Voisin 2003). Again, Russia has been at the forefront of research on this topic: while the influences of the size and shape of the forcing on one hand, and of viscosity on the other hand, had been known for some time (Lighthill 1978; Gorodtsov & Teodorovich 1986), it was Makhortykh & Rybak (1990) who first pointed out the influence of transients, and Ivanov (1989) and Makarov et al. (1990) who first pointed out the separation of the wave field into zones, where each influence dominates in turn. With reference to the transverse amplitude profiles through the beams, the terms bimodal were introduced for the zone governed by the size and shape of the forcing, and unimodal for the other zones. Further experiments have confirmed both the influence of transients (Ermanyuk & Gavrilov 2005) and the existence of bimodal and unimodal zones (Il'inykh et al. 1999a, b; Sutherland et al. 1999, 2000, 2003; Sutherland & Linden 2002; Flynn et al. 2003), consistent with numerical simulation (Javam et al. 2000). The present communication is organised in two parts: first a general perspective on internal wave generation theory is offered, then more attention is paid to the generation of monochro-matic waves by oscillating bodies. Two parameters are introduced which quantify the relative influence of the three phenomena affecting the modality of the waves (i.e. the size of the body, the viscosity of the fluid, and the time elapsed since the start-up), and a parameter space diagram is presented. Two novel aspects are exhibited: for the waves, the importance of near-field effects; for the body, the importance of added-mass effects. Near-field effects induce an asymmetry of the transverse amplitude profiles through the wave beams, a result validated by comparison with experiment and also visible in the calculations of Chashechkin et al. (2004). Added-mass effects induce a reduction of the wave amplitude and the occurrence of maximum power output at a frequency effectively independent from the direction of oscillation. These results are consistent with the direct measurements of added mass by Ermanyuk (2000, 2002) and Ermanyuk & Gavrilov (2002a, b, 2003), based on a preliminary version of the analysis (Voisin 1999).
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
Abstract_FSF_14.pdf (147.78 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origine : Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s)
Loading...

Dates et versions

hal-00268814 , version 1 (31-03-2011)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-00268814 , version 1

Citer

Bruno Voisin. Internal wave generation theory: from Lighthill onwards. 14th International Conference "Fluxes and Structures in Fluids", Jul 2007, St Petersburg, Russia. ⟨hal-00268814⟩

Collections

UGA CNRS OSUG LEGI
122 Consultations
436 Téléchargements

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More