Green's law revisited: Tidal long‐wave propagation in channels with strong topography
Author(s) -
Jay D. A.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/91jc01633
Subject(s) - amplitude , wavelength , inviscid flow , geology , perturbation (astronomy) , geometry , physics , tidal waves , mean flow , mechanics , geophysics , turbulence , mathematics , optics , quantum mechanics
Green's Law states that tidal long‐wave elevation ζ and tidal transport Q vary with width b and depth h according to ζ ≌ b −1/2 h −1/4 and Q ≌ b +1/2 h +/4 . This solution is of limited utility because it is restricted to inviscid, infinitesimal waves in channels with no mean flow and weak topography (those with topographic scale L ≫ wavelength λ). An analytical perturbation model including finite‐amplitude effects, river flow, and tidal flats has been used to show that (1) wave behavior to lowest order is a function of only two nondimensional parameters representing, respectively, the strength of friction at the bed and the rate of topographic convergence/divergence; (2) two different wave equations with nearly constant coefficients can be derived that together cover most physically relevant values of these parameters, even very strong topography; (3) a single, incident wave in a strongly convergent or divergent geometry may mimic a standing wave by having a ≡ 90° phase difference between Q and ζ and a very large phase speed, without the presence of a reflected wave; (4) channels with strong friction and/or strong topography ( L ≪ λ) show very large deviations from Green/s Law; and (5) these deviations arise because both frictional damping and the direct dependence of | Q | and |ζ| on topography (topographic funnelling) must be considered.
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