Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1721551 | Coastal Engineering | 2007 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of a thin viscous fluid–mud layer on nearshore nonlinear wave–wave interactions is studied using a parabolic frequency-domain nonlinear wave model, modified to incorporate a bottom dissipation mechanism based on a viscous boundary layer approach. The boundary-layer formulation allows for explicit calculation of the mud-induced wave damping rate. The model performed well in tests based on laboratory data. Numerical tests show that damping of high frequency waves occurs, mediated by “difference” nonlinear interactions. Simulations of 2-dimensional wave propagation over a mud “patch” of finite extent show that the wave dissipation causes significant downwave diffraction effects.
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Authors
James M. Kaihatu, Alexandru Sheremet, K. Todd Holland,