Author:
SULLIVAN PETER P.,McWILLIAMS JAMES C.,MOENG CHIN-HOH
Abstract
Turbulent flow over idealized water waves with varying wave slope ak and wave age
c/u∗ is investigated using direct numerical simulations at a bulk Reynolds number
Re = 8000. In the present idealization, the shape of the water wave and the associated
orbital velocities are prescribed and do not evolve dynamically under the action of
the wind. The results show that the imposed waves significantly influence the mean
flow, vertical momentum fluxes, velocity variances, pressure, and form stress (drag).
Compared to a stationary wave, slow (fast) moving waves increase (decrease) the
form stress. At small c/u∗, waves act
similarly to increasing surface roughness zo
resulting in mean vertical velocity profiles with shorter buffer and longer logarithmic
regions. With increasing wave age, zo decreases so that the wavy lower surface is
nearly as smooth as a flat lower boundary. Vertical profiles of turbulence statistics
show that the wave effects depend on wave age and wave slope but are confined
to a region kz < 1 (where k is the wavenumber of
the surface undulation and z is
the vertical coordinate). The turbulent momentum flux can be altered by as much as
40% by the waves. A region of closed streamlines (or cat's-eye pattern) centred about
the critical layer height was found to be dynamically important at low to moderate
values of c/u∗. The wave-correlated
velocity and flux fields are strongly dependent
on the variation of the critical layer height and to a lesser extent the surface orbital
velocities. Above the critical layer zcr the positions of the maximum and minimum
wave-correlated vertical velocity ww occur upwind
and downwind of the peak in zcr,
like a stationary surface. The wave-correlated flux
uwww is positive (negative) above
(below) the critical layer height.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
215 articles.
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