Author:
BÜHLER OLIVER,JACOBSON TIVON E.
Abstract
We present a theoretical and numerical investigation of longshore currents driven by
breaking waves on beaches, especially barred beaches. The novel feature considered
here is that the wave envelope is allowed to vary in the alongshore direction, which
leads to the generation of strong dipolar vortex structures where the waves are
breaking. The nonlinear evolution of these vortex structures is studied in detail
using a simple analytical theory to model the effect of a sloping beach. One of our
findings is that the vortex evolution provides a robust mechanism through which the
preferred location of the longshore current can move shorewards from the location
of wave breaking. Such current dislocation is an often-observed (but ill-understood)
phenomenon on real barred beaches.To underpin our results, we present a comprehensive theoretical description of the
relevant wave–mean interaction theory in the context of a shallow-water model for the
beach. Therein we link the radiation-stress theory of Longuet-Higgins & Stewart to
recently established results concerning the mean vorticity generation due to breaking
waves. This leads to detailed results for the entire life-cycle of the mean-flow vortex
evolution, from its initial generation by wave breaking until its eventual dissipative
decay due to bottom friction.In order to test and illustrate our theory we also present idealized nonlinear
numerical simulations of both waves and vortices using the full shallow-water equations with
bottom topography. In these simulations wave breaking occurs through shock
formation of the shallow-water waves. We note that because the shallow-water equations
also describe the two-dimensional flow of a homentropic perfect gas, our theoretical
and numerical results can also be applied to nonlinear acoustics and sound–vortex
interactions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
84 articles.
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