6 Handout
6 Handout
6 Handout
1. Characteristic scales
Consider water waves traveling in constant water depth h. The waves have a characteristic
amplitude A, characteristic wavelength
√ L, characteristic wave number k = 2π/L, and
characteristic long wave speed gh, in which g is the gravitational acceleration. The
parameter = A/h is a measure of how nonlinear the waves are; the parameter µ = kh is
a measure of how frequency dispersive the waves are.
2. Normalization
Using primes to denote dimensional variables, we normalize the variables as follows:
z0
0 0 0
p
(x, y) = k(x , y ), z = , t = t · k gh
h
η0
k
, φ = φ0 · A √
η =
A
h gh
k
√ √k . (1)
∂φ ∂φ ∂φ0 Ah gh ∂φ0 Ah gh 1
(u, v) = ( , ) = ( , ) = (u, v) · √
∂x ∂y ∂x0 k ∂y 0 k A
h gh
k
√
∂φ0 Ah gh
∂φ kh
0
w = ∂z = ∂z 0 1 = w · A √
h h gh
On the free surface, the KFSBC (kinematic free surface boundary condition) applies:
In addition, the DFSBC (dynamic free surface boundary condition) also applies on the
free surface:
2 2
µ2 (φt + η) + µ (φx + φ2y ) + φ2z = 0, z = η. (4)
2
Lastly, the no-penetration boundary condition is applied on the horizontal bottom:
φz = 0, z = −1. (5)
冪級 數 展 開 )
4. Power series expansion (冪
If we assume that the solution φ is an analytic function (解析函數), which means that its
Taylor series about any point in its domain converges to the function near that point, then
we can express the solution φ as a power series:
∞
X
φ(x, y, z, t) = (z + 1)n φn (x, y, t). (6)
n=0
1
ESOE 5136 2021 April 26 - Handout Lo
which produces a vector (向量). The Laplace operator ∇2 of some function f is defined as
Since (z + 1)n 6= 0 in general, for the above equation to hold, the terms in the square
brackets must equal zero:
h i −µ2 ∇2 φn
µ2 ∇2 φn + (n + 2)(n + 1)φn+2 = 0 ⇒ φn+2 = , n = 0, 1, 2, · · · . (11)
(n + 1)(n + 2)
2
ESOE 5136 2021 April 26 - Handout Lo
Keeping up to O(µ4 ) terms – which means that anything O(µ6 ) or smaller can be omitted
– we can express the solution φ using the power series (6) as
µ2 µ4
φ(x, y, z, t) = φ0 (x, y, t)− (z+1)2 ∇2 φ0 (x, y, t)+ (z+1)4 ∇2 ∇2 φ0 (x, y, t)+O(µ6 ). (15)
2 24
KFSBC
Expressing φz up to O(µ4 ),
µ4
φz = −µ2 (z + 1)∇2 φ0 + (z + 1)3 ∇2 ∇2 φ0 + O(µ6 ), (16)
6
and defining the total depth as
DFSBC
Expressing ∇φ and ∇2 φ up to O(µ2 ) (because higher-order terms will not be needed),
2
∇φ = ∇φ0 − µ (z + 1)2 ∇2 ∇φ0 + O(µ4 )
2 , (19)
2 2 2 2 2 4
(∇φ) = (∇φ) · (∇φ) = (∇φ0 ) − (∇φ0 )µ (z + 1) ∇ ∇φ0 + O(µ )
3
ESOE 5136 2021 April 26 - Handout Lo
4
ESOE 5136 2021 April 26 - Handout Lo
8. Pressure equation
The pressure field, normalized by ρgh, in which ρ is the fluid density, can be calculated
from the normalized Bernoulli equation as
( ) (
h 1 i h µ2 i
−P = z + φt + (∇φ)2 + 2 φ2z = z + φ0t − (z + 1)2 ∇ · ~u0t
2 µ 2
) . (29)
h 2 i
+ ~u0 − µ2 (z + 1)2 ~u0 · ∇2 ~u0 + µ2 (z + 1)2 (∇ · ~u0 )2 + O(µ4 )
2
It is worth pointing out that the hydrostatic pressure in (30) is O(1). The leading-order
dynamic pressure due to water waves is O().
布新 內 斯 克 方 程 )
9. Boussinesq equations (布
When written out fully in scalar form, the fully nonlinear and weakly dispersive wave
model is really lengthy and not easy to work with. A more practical but slightly less
accurate version is the Boussinesq equations.
The Boussinesq theory assumes that O() = O(µ2 ) < 1, which means that the waves are
weakly nonlinear and weakly dispersive – O() and O(µ2 ) are equally small but not com-
pletely negligible. Therefore, terms of O(, µ2 ) need to be kept, but terms of O(2 , µ2 , µ4 )
can be neglected.
Discarding terms of O(µ2 , µ4 ) in (28), and replacing H with 1 + η in (27) and (28) results
in h i
t
η + ∇ · (1 + η)~
u =0
µ2 , (31)
~ ~ ~ ~ 2 4
t
u + u · ∇ u + ∇η − ∇(∇ · u t ) = O(µ , µ )
3
which are called the Boussinesq equations in constant water depth. Again, the full
version applicable in variable water depths can be found in Lynett and Liu (2002); Mei
et al. (2005).
The corresponding pressure field for the Boussinesq equations is
µ2 2
P = η − z + (z + 2z)∇ · ~ut + O(2 µ2 , µ4 ), (32)
2
in which the fact that
~u0 = ~u + O(µ2 ) (33)
is utilized. From (32) we see that the pressure field is no longer hydrostatic in the Boussi-
nesq theory.
References
Lynett, P. and P. L.-F. Liu (2002), “A numerical study of submarine-landslide-generated waves
and run-up.” Proc. R. Soc. Lond., A 458, 2885–2910.
Mei, C., M. Stiassnie, and D. K.-P. Yue (2005), Theory and Applications of Ocean Surface
Waves. World Scientific.