Author:
GRUE JOHN,JENSEN ATLE,RUSÅS PER-OLAV,SVEEN J. KRISTIAN
Abstract
Properties of solitary waves propagating in a two-layer fluid are
investigated comparing
experiments and theory. In the experiments the velocity field induced by
the
waves, the propagation speed and the wave shape are quite accurately measured
using particle tracking velocimetry (PTV) and image analysis. The experiments
are
calibrated with a layer of fresh water above a layer of brine. The depth
of the brine
is 4.13 times the depth of the fresh water. Theoretical results are given
for this depth
ratio, and, in addition, in a few examples for larger ratios, up to 100[ratio ]1.
The wave
amplitudes in the experiments range from a small value up to almost maximal
amplitude.
The thickness of the pycnocline is in the range of approximately 0.13–0.26
times
the depth of the thinner layer. Solitary waves are generated by releasing
a volume
of fresh water trapped behind a gate. By careful adjustment of the length
and depth
of the initial volume we always generate a single solitary wave, even for
very large
volumes. The experiments are very repeatable and the recording technique
is very
accurate. The error in the measured velocities non-dimensionalized by the
linear long
wave speed is less than about 7–8% in all cases. The experiments
are compared with
a fully nonlinear interface model and weakly nonlinear Korteweg–de
Vries (KdV)
theory. The fully nonlinear model compares excellently with the experiments
for all
quantities measured. This is true for the whole amplitude range, even for
a pycnocline
which is not very sharp. The KdV theory is relevant for small wave amplitude
but
exhibit a systematic deviation from the experiments and the fully nonlinear
theory
for wave amplitudes exceeding about 0.4 times the depth of the thinner
layer. In the
experiments with the largest waves, rolls develop behind the maximal displacement
of
the wave due to the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability. The recordings
enable evaluation of
the local Richardson number due to the flow in the pycnocline. We find
that stability
or instability of the flow occurs in approximate agreement with the theorem
of Miles
and Howard.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
164 articles.
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