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Basic Wave Theory Review: Graham Warren Bureau of Meteorology Australia

This document provides an overview of basic wave theory. It defines different types of waves such as wind waves and swell waves. It discusses key wave characteristics like wavelength, height, period, and phase and group velocity. The document also covers wave growth and forecasting, the relationship between wave height, wind speed, and fetch, deep water wave properties, and how to forecast arriving swell from distant storms.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views

Basic Wave Theory Review: Graham Warren Bureau of Meteorology Australia

This document provides an overview of basic wave theory. It defines different types of waves such as wind waves and swell waves. It discusses key wave characteristics like wavelength, height, period, and phase and group velocity. The document also covers wave growth and forecasting, the relationship between wave height, wind speed, and fetch, deep water wave properties, and how to forecast arriving swell from distant storms.

Uploaded by

Manthan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Basic Wave Theory Review

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

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Definitions
Wind (or sea) waves - generated by the local prevailing
wind

Swell waves - the regular longer period waves that were


generated by the winds of distant weather systems.
There may be several sets of swell waves travelling in
different directions, causing a confused sea state.

Sea state is the combination of wind waves and swell.

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Properties of Waves
Wavelength (metres)
Height H (=2x amplitude) (metres)
Period T (seconds)
Phase velocity c
=cT

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Total wave height
Height of the wind waves = Hw
Height of Swell waves = Hsw

Total wave height = (Hw2 + Hsw2)1/2

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Dispersion
Dispersion is the variation of wave speed
with wavelength
Define 2 / T ; k 2 /
Dispersion relation is 2
gk tanh(kd )
deep water: gk
2

shallow water: 2 gk 2 d

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Group Velocity
Phase velocity is the speed at which a particular phase of the wave
propagates
Group velocity
Velocity at which a group of waves travel
Velocity of propagation of wave energy

c g / k

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Deep Water Waves
Applies when depth of water > /4
c2k2=gk
Phase Velocity : c = g/=gT /2
= cT = gT2/2 = 1.56T2 m (T in secs)
c=1.56T (m/sec)
Group velocity: cg= gT /4 = c/2 = 0.78 T m/sec

Thus: Longer waves travel faster

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The Wave Spectrum
Fourier Analysis of wave trains:
n
0 a j sin( j 0t j )
j 1
E

Variance of the wave record is


obtained by averaging the
squares of the deviations of
each of the wave components
from the mean - gives wave
spectrum (Energy spectrum) Frequency

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Wave Growth
Basic concepts
Manual forecasting techniques
Changing Wind
Swell Forecasting

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Wave Heights, Wind and Fetch
Energy from the wind is transferred to
waves
Waves lose energy Wave height
Whitecapping
Interaction with sea floor etc
depends on a
The greater the wind speed, the higher the balance
waves between
The longer the duration of the wind, the energy in and
higher the waves
The greater the distance over which the
energy out
wind blows (the FETCH) the higher the
waves.

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Wind Wave Growth
Growth usually explained by shear flow
instability
Airflow sucks at crests and pushes on troughs
Rate of growth is exponential as it depends
on the existing sea state and wave age
Empirical formulae have been derived from
large data set
Curves developed for manual forecasting
Workshop on Wind Wav17 June, 1
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Characteristic Height and Period of Deep
Water Waves
Empirical Studies show:
t = duration of
2 2
u gt u gX wind
H c ht ( ) hx ( 2 ) X=fetch
g u g u
Duration limited Fetch limited
u = wind speed
u gt u gX
Tc pt ( ) px ( 2 )
g u g u g = 9.8m/s2

ht, hx, pt and px are dimensionless functions.

They all tend to a limit as the parameter (gt/u or


gX/u2) increases to ~ 105 1
Wave Height and Period

= 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
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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.

Most waves have periods in the range 0.5Tc


to 1.5Tc
Important when forecasting swell

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Wave Heights with Changing Wind
Conditions
1. Change in wind direction
If wind direction changes by < 30, calculate
waves conditions as if no change in direction has
occurred
If wind direction changes by > 30, treat existing
waves as swell waves, and start calculation for
new wind direction from scratch.
As a rule of thumb, swell will decrease in height
by 25% over period of 12 hours
Workshop on Wind Wav17 June, 1
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Wave Heights with Changing Wind
Conditions
2. Increasing wind speed (direction change <30)
New wind speed is V2
Take wave height at time of increase = H1
Calculate the duration required to achieve H1
given the new wind speed (=T1)
If the new speed lasts for time T2, calculate wave
conditions assuming duration = T1 + T2 and speed
= V2.
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Example of Increasing Wind
An 8 m/s wind has blown for 6 hours, fetch
100km
The wind gradually increases to 16m/s over a
6 hour period.
Estimate Hc and Tc at the end of the period
For a quick calculation, when wind speed
increase is gradual from v1 to v2 over a period,
use speed = v2 (v2-v1)/4 as the speed in the
calculation.
Workshop on Wind Wav17 June, 2
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Wave Heights with Changing Wind
Conditions
3. Slackening wind speed
When wind drops below speed needed to
maintain height of existing waves*, the
waves turn into swell.
As a first approximation, swell height may
be reduced by 25% every 12 hours.

* The minimum wind speed that will produce the


existing wave height at the specified fetch
Swell Forecasting
For distant storms, regard the source of the
swell as a point
For nearby storms the situation is more
complicated
Questions:
When will the swell arrive?
Which wavelengths are involved?
What is the height of the swell?

Here we develop some simple, first


approximations 2
Swell Length and Arrival Time
Longest wavelengths travel fastest, so they arrive
first
Range of periods is T~ 0.5Tc to 1.5Tc
Other periods exist, but the energy in them is small
= 1.56T2 m (T in secs)
Speed is 1.515 T knots (T in secs)
Longest waves arrive after time:
Time ~ distance (NM)/(1.5*1.5Tc) hrs
Shortest waves take 3 times as long to arrive.

Eg: Tc=6secs, distance = 600 nm, min time = 44 hours


maximum swell length = 126m 2
Swell Height
Height of swell depends on
Height of waves in source region, and extent of source
region
Speed dispersion (longer waves and shorter waves have
different speeds dont arrive together)
Angular spreading of the waves (height decreases with
distance as wave energy spreads over larger areas)
Angle between wind direction and direction to storm

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Angular Spreading of Swell from a Storm

% 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

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Visual Observations
Guide only as visual observations are not
generally reliable
Observations of height tend to approximate
to the significant wave height

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Instruments
Wave buoys
Vertical acceleration measured can be
converted to wave height
Wave staff
Attached to platforms wave height measured
by change in resistance or capacitance of the
wave staff

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Instruments (2)
Pressure sensors
Mounted from platforms below surface
change in pressure is measure of wave height
Laser
Attached to platforms pointing downward

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Remote Sensing
Waves from ERS-2 Radar Altimeter

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Remote Sensing (2)
Synthetic Aperture Radar
Successive radar observations made along
satellite track
Optical or digital processing produces high
grade imaging of the longer waves
Wave directional spectrum (with 180o
ambiguity) obtained by analysis of image

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Finally.
The accuracy of any wave forecast is
dependant on the accuracy of the
wind forecast.

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