The Generation of Gravity-Capillary Solitary Waves by a Pressure Source Moving at a Trans-critical Speed
Naeem Masnadi, James H. Duncan

TL;DR
This study investigates the unsteady generation of gravity-capillary solitary waves by a moving pressure source near the minimum phase speed, combining experiments and simulations to analyze wave patterns, decay, and shedding behavior.
Contribution
It provides new experimental and numerical insights into the wave response near the critical speed, including the decay law and asymmetric shedding phenomena.
Findings
Depressions decay exponentially with a decay constant of order 1.
Shedding period decreases with increasing source speed and strength.
A new asymmetric shedding response occurs near the low-speed boundary.
Abstract
The unsteady response of a water free surface to a localized pressure source moving at constant speed in the range , where is the minimum phase speed of linear gravity-capillary waves in deep water, is investigated through experiments and numerical simulations. This unsteady response state, which consists of a V-shaped pattern behind the source and features periodic shedding of pairs of depressions from the tips of the V, was first observed qualitatively by Diorio et al. (Phys. Rev. Let., 103, 214502, 2009) and called state III. In the present investigation, cinematic shadowgraph and refraction-based techniques are utilized to measure the temporal evolution of the free surface deformation pattern downstream of the source as it moves along a towing tank, while numerical simulations of the model equation…
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