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Free-surface adjustment and topographic waves in coastal currents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2006

E. R. Johnson
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
M. K. Davey
Affiliation:
Meteorological Office Unit, Hooke Institute for Atmospheric Research, Clarendon Laboratory, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PU, UK

Abstract

The adjustment of rotating free-surface flow over a step-like escarpment abutting a vertical wall is discussed in the context of the shallow-water equations. The problem is simplified by considering an escarpment of small fractional depth, so that on the slow topographic timescale the initial, fast Poincaré and Kelvin wave adjustment of the free surface is effectively instantaneous, and further simplified by considering the surface displacement to be small compared with the escarpment height so that particle velocities are negligible during the topographic adjustment. Direct solution of the resulting linear system is not straightforward as arbitrarily small-scale motions are generated at sufficiently large times. The problem is reduced by a Green's function technique to one spatial dimension and the wall boundary layers resolved by introducing a scaling based on previously obtained limit solutions. Solutions verify the information-propagation arguments of Johnson (1985) and Gill et al. (1986) and also show interchange of fluid across the escarpment as eddies formed as the current crosses the step travel along the step with shallow water to their right. The pattern of evolution of the system is independent of the direction of the flow, depending solely on the sign of the topographic step. If the escarpment is such that topographic waves travel away from the wall, then a tongue of fluid moves outward along the step: the initial jet along the wall is diverted to flow parallel to, rather than across, the step. If waves travel towards the wall then the current is pinched into the wall and fluid crosses the escarpment in a thinning jet.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1990 Cambridge University Press

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