Wave-theories

Wave theories 

Linear Theory of Ocean surface waves Waves are undulations of the sea surface with a height of around a meter, where height is the vertical distance between the bottom of a trough and the top of a nearby crest. The wavelength, which we might take to be the distance between prominent crests, is around 50m-100m. Watching the waves for a few minutes, one  can notice that wave-height and wave-length are not constant. The heights vary randomly in time and space, and the statistical properties of the waves, such as the average mean height for a few hundred waves, change from day to day. These prominent offshore waves are generated by wind. Sometimes the local wind generates the waves, other times distant storms generate waves which ultimately reach the coast. If we watch closely for a long time, one can notice that sea level changes from hour to hour. Over a period of a day, sea level increases and decreases relative to a point on the shore by about a meter. The slow rise and fall of sea level is due to the tides, another type of wave on the sea surface. Tides have wavelengths of thousands of kilometers, and they are generated by the slow, very small changes in gravity due to the motion of the sun and the moon relative to earth.

 
Last modified: Monday, 25 June 2012, 9:12 AM