Differing Aspects of Free and Bound Waves in Obtaining Orbital Velocities from Surface Wave Records

Author:

Saprykina Yana1ORCID,Kuznetsov Sergey1ORCID,Aydogan Burak2ORCID,Ayat Berna3ORCID,Shtremel Margarita1

Affiliation:

1. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Nakhimovskiy Prospekt 36, Moscow 117997, Russia

2. Department of Civil Engineering, Gebze Technical University, Kocaeli 41400, Turkey

3. Department of Civil Engineering, Yildiz Technical University, Esenler, Istanbul 34220, Turkey

Abstract

In coastal zones, the accurate calculation of orbital particle velocities from surface wave measurements is quite important for estimating sediment transport, which is essentially controlled by the near-bottom velocity field. The main difficulty in obtaining orbital velocities from surface wave profiles is associated with the simultaneous existence of free and bound waves of the second harmonic with the same frequencies but different wave numbers. In a laboratory experiment, a discrepancy between the orbital velocities measured at different depths and the velocities obtained from synchronous wave records with the widely used transfer function of the linear theory was shown. The main reason for this was the different attenuations of free and bound waves with depth. Modeling with high spatial resolution made it possible to separate the free and bound waves and confirm this finding. It was found that free wave amplitudes decay with depth in exact accordance with the linear theory, while bound wave amplitudes decay much faster than the linear wave and Stokes theories predict. This difference and the unknown law of bound waves’ attenuation can lead to the inference of inaccurate orbital velocities from free surface elevations.

Funder

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Civil and Structural Engineering

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