Abstract
The non-hydrostatic description of three-dimensional waves incident
over a plane
beach at a long straight coastline is considered in terms of the inverse
Kontorovich–Lebedev integral transform. This is seen
as a natural extension to earlier work
by the author where the two-dimensional (normal incidence) flow is expressed
as
an inverse Mellin transform, and similar simplifications in the description
here are
encountered. In particular computations are undertaken for a variety of
beach slopes
of the form α=π/2m where m is an
integer and for a range of incidence angles.
These computations have previously only been practical for beaches whose
slope α is
regarded as asymptotically small thereby allowing versions of the mild-slope
equation
to be used. For the chosen slope angles, the solution is established with
rigour and
methods of estimating near- and far-field asymptotics arise naturally in
this discussion.
For the case of perfect reflection, a previously known solution is recovered
in closed
form as a finite sum of exponential terms, and a shoreline ‘amplification
factor’ aγ is considered for these waves and is computed for a range of beach slopes
through
the entire spectrum of incidence angles. It is shown analytically that,
in the limit of
normal incidence, the value of aγ approaches
the well-known classical result a0=m1/2
and, for glancing incidence, Whitham's (1979) result is confirmed
where the value
approaches either 1 or 0 depending on whether the beach angle is or is
not an angle
at which a new Ursell edge wave mode appears (m odd).As applications of the new development, comprehensive near-field expansions
for arbitrary reflection are written and verified by computation. These
permit the
construction of refracted wavefronts and wave rays for arbitrary beach
slope without
the usual phase velocity assumptions. Instability is indicated at very
oblique incidence
where nonlinear modelling (Peregrine & Ryrie 1983) predicts
‘anomalous refraction’.
Results are presented graphically and computation of derivatives of the
potential
enables estimation of the (second order) set-down seaward of the
breaker zone. This
is found to decrease as wave attack becomes increasingly oblique.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
33 articles.
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