Nonlinear shoaling of shallow water waves: perspective in terms of the inverse scattering transform |
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Authors: | A R Osborne L Bergamasco M Serio L Bianco L Cavaleri M Drago L Iovenitti and D Viezzoli |
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Institution: | (1) Istituto di Fisica Generale, Università di Torino, Torino, Italy;(2) Istituto Studio Dinamica Grandi Masse, CNR, Venezia, Italy;(3) Snamprogetti S.p.A., Offshore Division, Fano, Pesaro, Italy;(4) Osservatorio Geofisico Sperimentale, Trieste, Italy |
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Abstract: | Summary We study nonlinear interactions in measured surface wave trains obtained in the Northern Adriatic Sea about 16 kilometres
from Venice, Italy.Nonlinear Fourier analysis is discussed in terms of the exact spectral solution to the Korteweg-deVries (KdV) equation as given by theinverse scattering transform (IST). For the periodic and/or quasi-periodic boundary conditions assumed herein, the approach may be viewed as a nonlinear,
broad-banded generalization of the ordinary, linear Fourier transform. In particular, we study solition interactions, their
properties and the nonlinear dynamics of the radiation (or oscillation) modes as found from the inverse scattering transform
analysis. We also conduct a number of computer experiments in which measured wave trains are numerically propagated forward
in time toward shallow water and backward in time into deep water in order to assess how the nonlinear wave dynamics are influenced
by propagation over variable bathymetry. On this basis we develop a scenario for the evolution of nonlinear wave trains, initially
far offshore in deep water, as they propagate into shallow water regions. The deep-water waves have a small Ursell number
and are hence not very nonlinear; as they propagate toward shallow water, the Ursell number gradually increases in the numerical
experiments by about an order of magnitude. A useful parameterization of nonlinearity in these studies is the ?spectral modulus,?
a number between 0 and 1, which is associated with each IST spectral frequency. Small values of the modulus mean that a particular
spectral component is linear (a sine wave); large values of the modulus (≈1) indicate that the component is nonlinear (a soliton).
There is a systematic increase of the modulus as the waves propagate into shallow water where nonlinear effects predominate;
we describe how the modulus varies as a function of spectral frequency during this shoaling process. The results suggest that
the effect of increasing nonlinearity ?saturates? the IST spectrum (i.e. the modulus ≈1 for all frequencies) to that virtually all spectral components become solitons in sufficiently shallow water. |
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Keywords: | Surface waves tides and sea level |
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