Basic Wave Theory Review: Graham Warren Bureau of Meteorology Australia
Basic Wave Theory Review: Graham Warren Bureau of Meteorology Australia
Graham Warren
Bureau of Meteorology
Australia
Why Forecast Waves?
SOLAS
Shore
Protection
Surf
Oil and gas
exploration
17 June, 2
Wave Characteristics
Some simple definitions
Dispersion relation
Deep water waves
Wave Spectrum
shallow water: 2 gk 2 d
c g / k
= gt/u
or gX/u2
hx()
2
u
H c h ( ) ht()
g
u
Tc p ( )
g px() pt()
1
Wave Height and Period for General
Conditions
Need to take the fetch and duration (time for
which the wind is blowing) into account
Can use the general curves based on non-
dimensional parameters
simple diagram, complicated calculation
OR use a more complicated set of curves
Complicated diagram, no calculation
May need to take into account varying wind
conditions (changes in direction and/or speed)
Workshop on Wind Wav17 June, 1
e and Storm Surge An
Manual Wave Forecasting Diagram
(Gren and Dorrestein, 1976
Need fetch
2.8m >80km
5.8s
Fetch=25km
1.8m 4s
1
Range of Wave Heights and
Periods
Wave heights can range from 0 to 2Hc
The factor of 2 relates to the maximum wave
likely to be observed in a period of a few hours,
not the absolute maximum possible. The value
depends only weakly on the length of time.
% spreading
factor for
energy
Wind direction in storm
Take square
root for
Distance to storm/extent of storm
swell height
Extent of storm
Swell calculated here Eg: Swell =
Factor =0.15 0.15 * Hc
2
Wave Measurements
Visual observations
Instruments for measuring waves
Buoys
Sub-surface pressure sensors
Laser
Remote sensing
Radar Altimeter
Synthetic Aperture Radar