A numerical study on matching relationships of gravity waves in nonlinear interactions

Applying a fully nonlinear numerical scheme with second-order temporal and spatial precision, nonlinear interactions of grav- ity waves are simulated and the matching relationships of the wavelengths and frequencies of the interacting waves are dis- cussed. In resonant interactions, the wavelengths...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inScience China. Earth sciences Vol. 56; no. 6; pp. 1079 - 1090
Main Authors Huang, KaiMing, Zhang, ShaoDong, Yi, Fan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Heidelberg SP Science China Press 01.06.2013
Springer Nature B.V
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ISSN1674-7313
1869-1897
DOI10.1007/s11430-012-4522-0

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Summary:Applying a fully nonlinear numerical scheme with second-order temporal and spatial precision, nonlinear interactions of grav- ity waves are simulated and the matching relationships of the wavelengths and frequencies of the interacting waves are dis- cussed. In resonant interactions, the wavelengths of the excited wave are in good agreement with the values derived from sum or difference resonant conditions, and the frequencies of the three waves also satisfy the matching condition. Since the inter- acting waves obey the resonant conditions, resonant interactions have a reversible feature that for a resonant wave triad, any two waves are selected to be the initial perturbations, and the third wave can then be excited through sum or difference reso- nant interaction. The numerical results for nonresonant triads show that in nonresonant interactions, the wave vectors tend to approximately match in a single direction, generally in the horizontal direction. The frequency of the excited wave is close to the matching value, and the degree of mismatching of frequencies may depend on the combined effect of both the wavenumber and frequency mismatches that should benefit energy exchange to the greatest extent. The matching and mismatching rela- tionships in nonresonant interactions differ from the results of weak interaction theory that the wave vectors are required to satisfy the resonant matching condition but the frequencies are permitted to mismatch and oscillate with amplitude of half the mismatching frequency. Nonresonant excitation has an irreversible characteristic, which is different from what is found for the resonant interaction. For specified initial primary and secondary waves, it is difficult to predict the values of the mismatching wavenumber and frequency for the excited wave owing to the complexity.
Bibliography:Applying a fully nonlinear numerical scheme with second-order temporal and spatial precision, nonlinear interactions of grav- ity waves are simulated and the matching relationships of the wavelengths and frequencies of the interacting waves are dis- cussed. In resonant interactions, the wavelengths of the excited wave are in good agreement with the values derived from sum or difference resonant conditions, and the frequencies of the three waves also satisfy the matching condition. Since the inter- acting waves obey the resonant conditions, resonant interactions have a reversible feature that for a resonant wave triad, any two waves are selected to be the initial perturbations, and the third wave can then be excited through sum or difference reso- nant interaction. The numerical results for nonresonant triads show that in nonresonant interactions, the wave vectors tend to approximately match in a single direction, generally in the horizontal direction. The frequency of the excited wave is close to the matching value, and the degree of mismatching of frequencies may depend on the combined effect of both the wavenumber and frequency mismatches that should benefit energy exchange to the greatest extent. The matching and mismatching rela- tionships in nonresonant interactions differ from the results of weak interaction theory that the wave vectors are required to satisfy the resonant matching condition but the frequencies are permitted to mismatch and oscillate with amplitude of half the mismatching frequency. Nonresonant excitation has an irreversible characteristic, which is different from what is found for the resonant interaction. For specified initial primary and secondary waves, it is difficult to predict the values of the mismatching wavenumber and frequency for the excited wave owing to the complexity.
11-5843/P
gravity wave, nonlinear interaction, matching condition, detuning degree of interaction
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ISSN:1674-7313
1869-1897
DOI:10.1007/s11430-012-4522-0