Predicting the breaking strength of gravity water waves
M. Derakhti, M. L. Banner, and J. T. Kirby

TL;DR
This study uses high-fidelity simulations to relate wave breaking strength to a recently proposed onset parameter, improving prediction accuracy of energy dissipation during wave breaking events.
Contribution
It establishes a robust relationship between the breaking strength parameter and the rate of change of the onset parameter, refining previous models for wave breaking energy dissipation prediction.
Findings
Relationship between $b$ and $dB/dt$ at breaking onset.
Breaking strength parameter scales with local wave period.
Improved prediction of energy dissipation during wave breaking.
Abstract
We revisit the classical but as yet unresolved problem of predicting the strength of breaking 2-D and 3-D gravity water waves, as quantified by the amount of wave energy dissipated per breaking event. Following Duncan (1983), the wave energy dissipation rate per unit length of breaking crest may be related to the fifth moment of the wave speed and the non-dimensional breaking strength parameter . We use a finite-volume Navier-Stokes solver with LES resolution and volume-of-fluid surface reconstruction (Derakhti and Kirby 2014a, 2016) to simulate wave packet evolution, breaking onset and post-breaking evolution for representative cases of wave packets with breaking due to dispersive focusing and to modulational instability. The present study uses these results to investigate the relationship between the breaking strength parameter and the breaking onset parameter proposed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcean Waves and Remote Sensing · Arctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Fluid Dynamics Simulations and Interactions
