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Reconciling different formulations of viscous water waves and their mass conservation
- Source :
- Wave Motion, Vol. 97 (2020) P. 102610
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- The viscosity of water induces a vorticity near the free surface boundary. The resulting rotational component of the fluid velocity vector greatly complicates the water wave system. Several approaches to close this system have been proposed. Our analysis compares three common sets of model equations. The first set has a rotational kinematic boundary condition at the surface. In the second set, a gauge choice for the velocity vector is made that cancels the rotational contribution in the kinematic boundary condition, at the cost of rotational velocity in the bulk and a rotational pressure. The third set circumvents the problem by introducing two domains: the irrotational bulk and the vortical boundary layer. This comparison puts forward the link between rotational pressure on the surface and vorticity in the boundary layer, addresses the existence of nonlinear vorticity terms, and shows where approximations have been used in the models. Furthermore, we examine the conservation of mass for the three systems, and how this can be compared to the irrotational case.<br />32 pages, 5 figures
- Subjects :
- FOS: Physical sciences
General Physics and Astronomy
Boundary (topology)
Angular velocity
ddc:500.2
01 natural sciences
Mass conservation
010305 fluids & plasmas
Physics::Fluid Dynamics
0103 physical sciences
010301 acoustics
Conservation of mass
ddc:333.7-333.9
Physics
Viscosity
Applied Mathematics
Fluid Dynamics (physics.flu-dyn)
Mechanics
Physics - Fluid Dynamics
Vorticity
Conservative vector field
Computational Mathematics
Boundary layer
Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
Flow velocity
Gravity surface waves
Modeling and Simulation
Free surface
Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics (physics.ao-ph)
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 01652125
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Wave Motion, Vol. 97 (2020) P. 102610
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....589a94bbc51bea57897d39f8f7c8debc