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Theory of wind-driven sea by V.E. Zakharov S. Badulin A.Dyachenko V.Geogdjaev N.Ivenskykh A.Korotkevich A.Pushkarev In collaboration with:
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Plan of the lecture: 1.Weak-turbulent theory 2.Kolmogorov-type spectra 3.Self-similar solutions 4.Experimental verification of weak-turbulent theory 5.Numerical verification of weak-turbulent theory 6.Freak-waves solitons and modulational instability
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- Green function of the Dirichlet-Neuman problem -- average steepness
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Normal variables: Truncated equations:
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Canonical transformation - eliminating three-wave interactions:
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where
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Statistical description: Hasselmann equation:
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Kinetic equation for deep water waves (the Hasselmann equation, 1962) - empirical dependences
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Conservative KE has formal constants of motion wave action energy momentum Q – flux of action P – flux of energy For isotropic spectra n=n(|k|) Q and P are scalars let n ~ k -x, then S nl ~ k 19/2-3x F(x), 3 < x < 9/2
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Energy spectrum
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F(x)=0, when x=23/6, x=4 – Kolmogorov-Zakharov solutions Kolmogorov’s constants are expressed in terms of F(y), where exponent for y F(y)
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Kolmogorov’s cascades S nl =0 (Zakharov, PhD thesis 1966) Direct cascade (Zakharov PhD thesis,1966; Zakharov & Filonenko 1966) Inverse cascade (Zakharov PhD thesis,1966 ) Numerical experiment with “artificial” pumping (grey). Solution is close to Kolmogorov-Zakharov solutions in the corresponding “inertial” intervals
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Phillips, O.M., JFM. V.156,505-531, 1985.
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S nl >> S input, S diss Nonlinear transfer dominates! Just a hypothesis to check
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Existence of inertial intervals for wind-driven waves is a key point of critics of the weak turbulence approach for water waves Wave input term S in for U 10 p /g=1 Non-dimensional wave input rates Dispersion of different estimates of wave input S in and dissipation S diss is of the same magnitude as the terms themselves !!!
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Term-to-term comparison of S nl and S in. Algorithm by N. Ivenskikh (modified Webb-Resio-Tracy). Young waves, standard JONSWAP spectrum Mean-over-angle Down-wind
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The approximation procedure splits wave balance into two parts when S nl dominates We do not ignore input and dissipation, we put them into appropriate place ! Self-similar solutions (duration-limited) can be found for (*) for power-law dependence of net wave input on time
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We have two-parametric family of self-similar solutions where relationships between parameters are determined by property of homogeneity of collision integral S nl and function of self-similar variable U obeys integro-differential equation Stationary Kolmogorov-Zakharov solutions appear to be particular cases of the family of non-stationary (or spatially non-homogeneous) self-similar solutions when left-hand and right-hand sides of (**) vanish simultaneously !!!
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Self-similar solutions for wave swell (no input and dissipation)
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Quasi-universality of wind-wave spectra Spatial down-wind spectra spectra Dependence of spectral shapes on indexes of self-similarity is weak
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Numerical solutions for duration-limited case vs non-dimensional frequency U/g *
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1. Duration-limited growth 2. Fetch-limited growth Time-(fetch-) independent spectra grow as power-law functions of time (fetch) but experimental wind speed scaling is not consistent with our “spectral flux approach” Experimental dependencies use 4 parameters. Our two-parameteric self- similar solutions dictate two relationships between these 4 parameters For case 2 ss – self-similarity parameter
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Thanks to Paul Hwang Experimental power-law fits of wind-wave growth. Something more than an idealization?
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Exponents are not arbitrary, not “universal”, they are linked to each other. Numerical results (blue – “realistic” wave inputs) Total energy and total frequency Energy and frequency of spectral “core”
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Exponents p (energy growth) vs q (frequency downshift) for 24 fetch- limited experimental dependencies. Hard line – theoretical dependence p =(10q -1)/2 1.“Cleanest” fetch- limited 2.Fetch-limited composite data sets 3.One-point measurements converted to fetch- limited one 4.Laboratory data included
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Self-similarity parameter ss vs exponent p for 24 experimental fetc-limited dependencies 1.“Cleanest” fetch- limited 2.Fetch-limited composite data sets 3.One-point measurements converted to fetch- limited one 4.Laboratory data included
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Numerical verification of the Hasselmann equation
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Dynamical equations : Hasselmann (kinetic) equation :
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Two reasons why the weak turbulent theory could fail: 1.Presence of the coherent events -- solitons, quasi - solitons, wave collapses or wave- breakings 2.Finite size of the system – discrete Fourier space: Quazi-resonances
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Dynamic equations: domain of 4096x512 point in real space Hasselmann equation: domain of 71x36 points in frequency-angle space
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Four damping terms: 1. Hyper-viscous damping 2. WAM cycle 3 white-capping damping 3. WAM cycle 4 white-capping damping 4. New damping term
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WAM Dissipation Function: WAM cycle 3: WAM cycle 4: Komen 1984 Janssen 1992 Gunter 1992 Komen 1994
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New Dissipation Function:
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Freak-waves solitons and modulational instability
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