MOVIES
Main animations page
-
Waves encountering a turning point (4.3MB gif file) To create
this movie a background density field was used for which the
buoyancy frequency decreases with height. Waves are generated
using an oscillatory forcing term in the vertical momentum
equation. The forcing is located at z=0.2 with the bottom and
surface of the fluid being at z = 0 and 1 respectively. Upward
propagating energy encounters a turning point at
z=0.5. As the turning point is approached the energy beam
turns to become vertical. Energy reflects at the turning point
and propagates downward. In these animations the horizontal
velocity is shown. Green/purple are negative/positive values
of u. Red indicates small values of u. Phase propagation is
perpendicular to energy propagation with phase and energy
propagating in opposite vertical directions.
-
Supercritical flow over a bump (1.2MB gif file) This shows
the waves generated by an impulsively started supercritical
flow over a bump. Uniform stratification. Upstream flow speed
is U=1. Froude number is 1.2.
-
Shoaling solitary wave (0.3MB gif file) This shows
the evolution of a shoaling solitary wave. A single solitary
wave in deep water of depth 100m shoals over a narrow shelf
edge into water 40m deep. Stratification increases
exponentially towards the surface. On the shelf a large
leading solitary wave with a trapped core is formed. Trailing
are several other waves, including large a mode-2 wave. A
small reflected wave can also be detected. Contours are at
equal density intervals. Surface to bottom density change is
0.01 in the deep water (nondimensionalized by reference
density). Simulations were done using 3000 points in the
horizontal, 120 in the vertical.
-
Shoaling solitary wave (1.7MB gif file) Magnified view of
previous shoaling wave animation. Only upper 60 m and
rightmost 5 km are shown. Temporal resolution is increased by
factor of four.
-
Nonlinear evolution of a tilted thermocline (1.6MB gif file) This
illustrates nonlinear steepening and the formation of
solitary waves in a lake with a simple bathymetry consisting
of a deep central region of constant depth and two shelves,
lyin below the thermocline, at either end of the lake. The
initial state consists of a tilted thermocline at rest. There
is no flow through the two endwalls. With
no external force to maintain its position, the thermocline
levels out at the two side walls as predicted by the linear
wave equation. After some time the wave front steepens due to
nonlinear effects and trains of solitary-like waves are
formed. Both mode-one and mode-two waves can be seen. The
evolution is complicated by the depth change.
-
Lake Opeongo: case 1 (21 MB gif file)
This illustrates nonlinear
steepening and the formation of solitary
waves in a lake using bathymetry taken from an east-west
transect in the South Arm of Lake Opeongo which is in
Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada. The initial state
consists of a tilted thermocline with slope 0.0001 with the
fluid at rest. Temperatures above and below the thermocline
are 20 and 8 degrees C respectively. The upper panel shows
the density field. The horizontal velocity field is shown in
the bottom panel (blue-green are negative (leftward) values,
red-orange-yellow are positive). No-slip boundary conditions
with a viscosity of 10e-5 m^2/s and a diffusivity of 10e-7
m^2/s were used. For this 2D simulation
fluid is forced to flow over the ridges in the lake. In the
lake itself, or in a 3D simulation, fluid could flow around
the ridges and the wave formation process could be
significantly different.
-
Lake Opeongo: case 2 (12 MB gif file)
Same as previous case but with a larger initial thermocline
slope of 0.0015.
-
Tidal flow over the Knight Inlet Sill (0.69MB gif file) This
illustrates the generation of large internal waves downstream
of a tall sill. The topography and density stratification are
taken from observations made by David Farmer and Larry Armi at
the Knight Inlet Sill, BC. A large overturning wave above the
downstream side of the sill creates a thick layer of slow
moving fluid. Beneath, a thin downslope jet is formed. This
mechanism lies behind the generation of the Chinook winds on
the eastern side of the Canadian Rockies. The jet is unstable
and strong vortices with associated pulsations in the velocity are
created.
Kevin Lamb's
home page