Observation of dispersive shock waves developing from initial depressions in shallow water
0103 physical sciences
shallow water, dispersive shock, waves
Dispersive shock waves; Korteweg-de Vries equation; Water waves; Whitham equation; Condensed Matter Physics; Statistical and Nonlinear Physics
01 natural sciences
DOI:
10.1016/j.physd.2016.01.007
Publication Date:
2016-01-25T07:47:17Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Abstract We investigate surface gravity waves in a shallow water tank, in the limit of long wavelengths. We report the observation of non-stationary dispersive shock waves rapidly expanding over a 90 m flume. They are excited by means of a wave maker that allows us to launch a controlled smooth (single well) depression with respect to the unperturbed surface of the still water, a case that contains no solitons. The dynamics of the shock waves are observed at different levels of nonlinearity equivalent to a different relative smallness of the dispersive effect. The observed undulatory behavior is found to be in good agreement with the dynamics described in terms of a Korteweg–de Vries equation with evolution in space, though in the most nonlinear cases the description turns out to be improved over the quasi linear trailing edge of the shock by modeling the evolution in terms of the integro-differential (nonlocal) Whitham equation.
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