5 research outputs found
Reflecting tidal wave beams and local generation of solitary waves in the ocean thermocline
It is generally accepted that ocean internal solitary waves can arise from the interaction
of the barotropic tide with the continental shelf, which generates an internal tide that in
turn steepens and forms solitary waves as it propagates shorewards. Some field observations,
however, reveal large-amplitude internal solitary waves in deep water, hundreds of
kilometers away from the continental shelf, suggesting an alternative generation mechanism:
tidal flow over steep topography forces a propagating beam of internal tidal wave
energy which impacts the thermocline at a considerable distance from the forcing site
and gives rise to internal solitary waves there. Motivated by this possibility, a simple
nonlinear long-wave model is proposed for the interaction of a tidal wave beam with
the thermocline and the ensuing local generation of solitary waves. The thermocline is
modelled as a density jump across the interface of a shallow homogeneous fluid layer
on top of a deep uniformly stratified fluid, and a finite-amplitude propagating internal
wave beam of tidal frequency in the lower fluid is assumed to be incident and reflected
at the interface. The induced weakly nonlinear long-wave disturbance on the interface is
governed in the far field by an integral–differential equation which accounts for nonlinear
and dispersive effects as well as energy loss owing to radiation into the lower fluid. Depending
on the intensity of the incident beam, nonlinear wave steepening can overcome
radiation damping so a series of solitary waves may arise in the thermocline. Sample
numerical solutions of the governing evolution equation suggest that this mechanism is
quite robust for typical oceanic conditions
Interactions between Meso- and Sub-Mesoscale Gravity Waves and their Efficient Representation in Mesoscale-Resolving Models
As present weather-forecast codes and increasingly many atmospheric climate models resolve at least part of the mesoscale flow, and hence also internal gravity waves (GWs), it is natural to ask whether even in such configurations sub-gridscale GWs might impact the resolved flow, and how their effect could be taken into account. This motivates a theoretical and numerical investigation of the interaction between unresolved sub-mesoscale and resolved mesoscale GWs, using Boussinesq dynamics for simplicity. By scaling arguments, first a subset of sub-mesoscale GWs that can indeed influence the dynamics of mesoscale GWs is identified. Therein, hydrostatic GWs with wavelengths corresponding to the largest unresolved scales of present-day limited-area weather forecast models are an interesting example. A large-amplitude WKB theory, allowing for a mesoscale unbalanced flow, is then
formulated, based on multi-scale asymptotic analysis utilizing a proper scale-separation parameter. Purely vertical propagation of sub-mesoscale GWs is found to be most important, implying inter alia that the resolved flow is only affected by the vertical flux convergence of sub-mesoscale horizontal momentum at leading order. In turn, sub-mesoscale GWs are refracted by mesoscale vertical wind shear while conserving their wave-action density. An efficient numerical implementation of the theory uses a phase-space ray tracer, thus handling the frequent appearance of caustics. The WKB approach and its numerical implementation are validated successfully against sub-mesoscale resolving simulations of the resonant radiation of mesoscale inertia GWs by a horizontally as well as vertically confined sub-mesoscale GW packet
Conditions and stability analysis for saddle–node bifurcations of solitary waves in generalized nonlinear Schrödinger equations
Saddle-node bifurcations of solitary waves in generalized nonlinear Schrödinger equations with arbitrary forms of nonlinearity and external potentials in arbitrary spatial dimensions are analyzed. First, general conditions for these bifurcations are derived. Second, it is shown analytically that the linear stability of these solitary waves does not switch at saddle-node bifurcations, which is in stark contrast with finite-dimensional dynamical systems where stability switching takes place. Third, it is shown that this absence of stability switching does not contradict the Vakhitov–Kolokolov stability criterion or the results in finite-dimensional dynamical systems. Fourth, it is shown that this absence of stability switching holds not only for real potentials but also for complex potentials. Lastly, various numerical examples will be given to confirm these analytical findings. In particular, saddle-node bifurcations with both branches of solitary waves being stable will be presented.
Rogue edge waves in the ocean
Theoretically possible rogue edge wave are studied over cylindrical bottom in the framework of nonlinear shallow water equations in a weakly nonlinear limit. The nonlinear mechanisms (nonlinear dispersion enhancement, modulation instability and multimodal interactions) of possible anomalous edge wave appearance are analyzed