Internal ring waves in a three-layer fluid over a linear shear current
D. Tseluiko, N.S. Alharthi, R. Barros, K.R. Khusnutdinova

TL;DR
This study analyzes weakly-nonlinear internal ring waves in a three-layer fluid with a linear shear current, revealing how vorticity influences wavefront shapes, propagation directions, and stability, with analytical and numerical insights.
Contribution
It presents the first theoretical analysis of internal ring waves in a three-layer fluid with shear, deriving an angular adjustment equation and exploring wavefront behavior under different vorticity regimes.
Findings
Wavefront of faster mode elongated in current direction
Wavefront of slower mode squeezed and can form swallowtail singularities
Strong vorticity causes wavefronts to propagate downstream and can lead to instability
Abstract
Oceanic internal waves often have curvilinear fronts and propagate over various currents. We present the first study of long weakly-nonlinear internal ring waves in a three-layer fluid in the presence of a background linear shear current. The leading order of this theory leads to the angular adjustment equation - a nonlinear first-order differential equation describing the dependence of the linear long wave speed on the angle to the direction of the current. Ring waves correspond to singular solution (envelope of the general solution) of this equation, and they can exist only under certain conditions. The constructed solutions reveal qualitative differences in the shapes of the wavefronts of the two baroclinic modes: the wavefront of the faster mode is elongated in the direction of the current, while the wavefront of the slower mode is squeezed. Moreover, different regimes are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
