5 research outputs found
Integrated Numerical Models in Coastal Areas: An Example of Their Application in the North Adriatic Sea
Recent decades have witnessed considerable
developments in the field of integrated numerical
models used for simulating dynamic
processes in coastal areas, that can now provide
quantitative support to decision makers
for questions such as erosion and coastal
vulnerability.
Improvements in various theoretical formulations
and an on-going increase in computing
power (alongside the growing availability of
long-term observations and numerical output
from meteorological and sea-state models) allow
the implementation of high-resolution and
long-term applications.However, the efficient use of these numerical
tools is a function of their capacity to describe
a variety of physical processes that are ‘integrated’
amongst themselves correctly. Indeed, from
the air-sea interface to the turbulent mixing of
water masses and the water-sediment interaction,
integrated numerical modelling has to face
a series of scientific and practical challenges still
open. Examples include the non-linear interaction
of waves and currents, the problem of
turbulence, the modelling of resuspension and
sediment-transport processes, the role of longperiod
waves in generating beach and dune erosion.
Dealing with these using numerical models
is necessary for a variety of reasons, from protecting
the coast to search-and-rescue activities
and support for marine construction work of all
types