Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-m8qmq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T17:22:57.423Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Experiments on solitary internal Kelvin waves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2006

T. Maxworthy
Affiliation:
Departments of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089–1453

Abstract

Elementary calculations indicate that the effect of the Earth's rotation is likely to be important in the dynamics of most internal waves in oceans, lakes and the atmosphere. Here we present measurements of the structure and properties of one class of such waves, namely solitary internal Kelvin waves, in which the Coriolis force generated by wave motion in a stratified fluid is opposed by a pressure gradient and hence change in wave amplitude along its crest. We confirm that the wave speed is independent of the rate at which the system rotates and depends only on the stratification and maximum wave amplitude. However, rotation is shown to have a large effect on both the rate at which the amplitude varies with time and the cross-stream’ structure of the wave. In accordance with well-established theory, the amplitude transverse to the direction of propagation varies exponentially. This results in a decreasing wave speed with increasing distance from the wall, which in turn requires the wave front be curved backwards in order for the wave as a whole to propagate at a speed given by its maximum amplitude. Such a front curvature is not contained within the available theories. The rapid decay of wave amplitude is found to be due to the generation of inertial waves in the homogeneous fluid above and below the internal wave, and a reasonably successful scaling of this effect has been found. We also discuss the adjustment of the waves to geostropic balance and comment on applications of our results to natural systems.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1983 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Amen, R. And Maxworthy. T. 1980 The gravitational collapse of a mixed region into a linearly stratified fluid J. Fluid Mech. 96, 65.Google Scholar
Anh, N. N. & Gill, A. E. 1981 The generation of coastal lows by synoptic scale wave Q. J. R. Met. Soc. 107, 521.Google Scholar
Baines, P. G. 1980 Baines, P. G. The dynamics of the Southerly Buster, Austral. Met. Mag, 28.Google Scholar
Bannon, P. R. 1981 Synoptic scale forcing of coastal lows: forced double Kelvin waves in the atmosphere. Q. J. R. Met. Soc. 107, 313.Google Scholar
Benjamin, T. B. 1967 Internal waves of permanent form in fluids of great depth J. Fluid Mech. 29, 559.Google Scholar
Britter, R. E. & Simpson, J. E. 1978 Experiments on the dynamics of a gravity current head J. Fluid Mech. 88, 223.Google Scholar
Britter, R. E. & Simpson, J. E. 1981 A note on the structure of the head of a intrusive gravity current J. Fluid Mech. 112, 459.Google Scholar
Chabert D'Hieres, G. & Suberville, J. L. 1976 A theoretical and experimental study of internal waves in a rotating-stratified medium. In Proc. 14th Congress IUTAM, Delft, vol. 2.
Clarke, A. J. 1977 Wind-forced linear and non-linear Kelvin waves along an irregular coast J. Fluid Mech. 83, 337.Google Scholar
Farmer, D. M. 1978 Observations of long nonlinear internal waves in a lake J. Phys. Oceanogr. 8, 63.Google Scholar
Farmer, D. M. & Smith, J. D. 1980 Tidal interaction of stratified flow with a sill in Knight Inlet Deep-Sea Res. 27A, 239.Google Scholar
Faust, K. M. 1981 Intrusion of a density front into a stratified environment. Report III, Univ. Karlsruhe, Inst. F. Wasserbau III.Google Scholar
Gauntlett, D. J. 1981 The numerical simulation of intense frontal discontinuities over South Eastern Australia. In Proc. I.A.M.A.P. Nowcasting Symp., Hamburg.
Hamblin, P. F. 1978 Internal Kelvin waves in a fjord lake J. Geophys. Res. 83, 2409.Google Scholar
Heikes, K. & Maxworthy, T. 1982 Observations of inertial waves in a homogeneous, rotating fluid J. Fluid Mech. 125, 319.Google Scholar
Hunkins, D. & Fliegel, M. 1973 Internal undular surges in Seneca Lake: a natural occurrence of solitons. J. Geophys. Res. 78, 539.Google Scholar
Joseph, R. I. 1977 Solitary waves in a finite depth fluid. J. Phys. A: Math. (Gen.) 10, L255.Google Scholar
Kravtchenko, J. & Suberville, J.-L. 1977 Étude théorique des ondes internes dans les eaux d'un basin en rotation. Annales Hydrographiques 5ème série 5, fascl. no. 476, 95116.Google Scholar
Mason, P. J. & Sykes, R. J. 1983 A numerical study of rapidly rotating flow over surface-mounted obstacles. Submitted to J. Fluid Mech.Google Scholar
Maxworthy, T. 1980 On the formation of nonlinear, internal waves from the gravitational collapse of mixed regions in two and three dimensions J. Fluid Mech. 96, 47.Google Scholar
Mortimer, C. H. 1955 Some effects of the Earth's rotation on water movements in stratified lakes Proc. Intl Assoc. Appl. Limnol. 12, 66.Google Scholar
Pedlosky, J. 1979 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics. Springer.
Smith, J. D. & Farmer, D. M. 1977 Non-linear internal waves and hydraulic jumps in a fjord. In Geofluiddynamic Wave Mathematics, pp. A253. University of Washington, Seattle.
Stern, M. E., Whitehead, J. A. & Hua, B. L. 1982 The intrusion of a density current along the coast of a rotating fluid J. Fluid Mech. 123, 237.Google Scholar
Suberville, J.-L. 1974 Ondes internesen fluide tournant. Contribution théorique et expérimentale. Thèse, L'Université Scientifique et Médicale de Grenoble.
Thorpe, S. A. 1971 Asymmetry of the internal surge in Loch Ness Nature 231, 306.Google Scholar
Thorpe, S. A. 1974 Near-resonant forcing in a shallow two-layer fluid: a model for the internal surge in Loch Ness? J. Fluid Mech. 63, 509.Google Scholar
Thorpe, S. A., Hall, A. & Crofts, I. 1972 The internal surge in Loch Ness Nature 237, 96.Google Scholar
Weidman, P. D. & Maxworthy, T. 1978 Experiments on strong interactions between solitary waves J. Fluid Mech. 85, 417.Google Scholar