On the Reflectance of Uniform Slopes for Normally Incident Interfacial Solitary Waves

Author:

Bourgault Daniel1,Kelley Daniel E.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Physical Oceanography, Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada

2. Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

Abstract

Abstract The collision of interfacial solitary waves with sloping boundaries may provide an important energy source for mixing in coastal waters. Collision energetics have been studied in the laboratory for the idealized case of normal incidence upon uniform slopes. Before these results can be recast into an ocean parameterization, contradictory laboratory findings must be addressed, as must the possibility of a bias owing to laboratory sidewall effects. As a first step, the authors have revisited the laboratory results in the context of numerical simulations performed with a nonhydrostatic laterally averaged model. It is shown that the simulations and the laboratory measurements match closely, but only for simulations that incorporate sidewall friction. More laboratory measurements are called for, but in the meantime the numerical simulations done without sidewall friction suggest a tentative parameterization of the reflectance of interfacial solitary waves upon impact with uniform slopes.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

Reference12 articles.

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4. Internal solitary wave breaking and run-up on a uniform slope.;Helfrich;J. Fluid Mech.,1992

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