Wave breaking in the presence of wind drift and swell

Author:

Phillips O. M.,Banner M. L.

Abstract

Wind, blowing over a water surface, induces a thin layer of high vorticity in which the wind stress is supported by molecular viscosity; the magnitude of the surface drift, the velocity difference across the layer, being of the order of 3% of the wind speed. When long waves move across the surface, there is a nonlinear augmentation of the surface drift near the long-wave crests, so that short waves, superimposed on the longer ones, experience an augmented drift in these regions. This is shown to reduce the maximum amplitude that the short waves can attain when they are at the point of incipient breaking.Theoretical estimates of the reduction are compared with measurements in wind-wave tanks by the authors and by Mitsuyasu (1966) in which long mechanically generated waves are superimposed on short wind-generated waves. The reductions measured in the energy density of the short waves by increasing the slope of the longer ones at constant wind speed are generally consistent with the predictions of the theory in a variety of cases.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics

Reference8 articles.

1. Lamb, H. 1953 Hydrodynamics .Cambridge University Press.

2. Phillips, O. M. 1968 The Dynamics of the Upper Ocean .Cambridge University Press.

3. Longuet-Higgins, M. S. & Stewart, R. W. 1960 Changes in the form of short gravity waves on long wind waves and tidal currents J. Fluid Mech. 8,565–583.

4. Bole, J. B. & Hsu, E. Y. 1967 Response of gravity water waves to wind excitation.Stanford University Dept. Civil Engng Tech. Rep. no. 79.

5. Banner, M. L. 1973 An investigation of the role of short waves and wind drift in the interaction between wind and long gravity waves. Ph.D. dissertation,The Johns Hopkins University.

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