22,888 research outputs found

    Hydrodynamics of the Oscillating Wave Surge Converter in the open ocean

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    A potential flow model is derived for a large flap-type oscillating wave energy converter in the open ocean. Application of the Green's integral theorem in the fluid domain yields a hypersingular integral equation for the jump in potential across the flap. Solution is found via a series expansion in terms of the Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind and even order. Several relationships are then derived between the hydrodynamic parameters of the system. Comparison is made between the behaviour of the converter in the open ocean and in a channel. The degree of accuracy of wave tank experiments aiming at reproducing the performance of the device in the open ocean is quantified. Parametric analysis of the system is then undertaken. It is shown that increasing the flap width has the beneficial effect of broadening the bandwidth of the capture factor curve. This phenomenon can be exploited in random seas to achieve high levels of efficiency.Comment: Submitted to: EJMB/Fluids, 16/07/201

    Trapped waves between submerged obstacles

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    Free-surface flows past submerged obstacles in a channel are considered. The fluid is assumed to be inviscid and incompressible and the flow to be irrotational. In previous work involving a single obstacle (Dias & Vanden-Broeck 2002), new solutions called ‘generalized hydraulic falls’ were found. These solutions are characterized by a supercritical flow on one side of the obstacle and a train of waves on the other. However, in the case of a single submerged object, the generalized hydraulic falls are unphysical because the waves do not satisfy the radiation condition. In this paper new solutions for the flow past two obstacles of arbitrary shape are computed. These solutions are characterized by a train of waves ‘trapped’ between the obstacles. The generalized hydraulic falls are shown to describe locally the flow over one of the two obstacles when the distance between the two obstacles is large

    Statistical emulation of a tsunami model for sensitivity analysis and uncertainty quantification

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    Due to the catastrophic consequences of tsunamis, early warnings need to be issued quickly in order to mitigate the hazard. Additionally, there is a need to represent the uncertainty in the predictions of tsunami characteristics corresponding to the uncertain trigger features (e.g. either position, shape and speed of a landslide, or sea floor deformation associated with an earthquake). Unfortunately, computer models are expensive to run. This leads to significant delays in predictions and makes the uncertainty quantification impractical. Statistical emulators run almost instantaneously and may represent well the outputs of the computer model. In this paper, we use the Outer Product Emulator to build a fast statistical surrogate of a landslide-generated tsunami computer model. This Bayesian framework enables us to build the emulator by combining prior knowledge of the computer model properties with a few carefully chosen model evaluations. The good performance of the emulator is validated using the Leave-One-Out method

    Study of BBˉ∗B\bar{B}^* and B∗Bˉ∗B^*\bar{B}^* interactions in I=1I=1 and relationship to the Zb(10610)Z_b(10610), Zb(10650)Z_b(10650) states

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    We use the local hidden gauge approach in order to study the BBˉ∗B\bar{B}^* and B∗Bˉ∗B^*\bar{B}^* interactions for isospin I=1. We show that both interactions via one light meson exchange are not allowed by OZI rule and, for that reason, we calculate the contributions due to the exchange of two pions, interacting and noninteracting among themselves, and also due to the heavy vector mesons. Then, to compare all these contributions, we use the potential related to the heavy vector exchange as an effective potential corrected by a factor which takes into account the contribution of the others light mesons exchange. In order to look for poles, this effective potential is used as the kernel of the Bethe-Salpeter equation. As a result, for the BBˉ∗B\bar{B}^* interaction we find a loosely bound state with mass in the range 10587−1060110587-10601 MeV, very close to the experimental value of the Zb(10610)Z_b(10610) reported by Belle Collaboration. For the B∗Bˉ∗B^*\bar{B}^* case, we find a cusp at 1065010650 MeV for all spin J=0, 1, 2J=0,\,1,\,2 cases.Comment: 23 pages, 20 figure
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