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McNabb Symposium
February 7-8, 2000
Auckland University
Auckland, New Zealand

Organizers
Prof Graeme Wake, Prof Robert McKibbin, Dr Steve Taylor, Dr Graham Weir

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Weak formulation of water wave equations
by
Alfred Sneyd
University of Waikato

An alternative method for deriving water wave dispersion relations and evolution equations is to use a weak formulation. The free-surface displacement \eta is written as an eigenfunction expansion,
\eta = \infty
å
n=1 
an (t) En ,
where the an(t) are time-dependent coefficients. For a tank with vertical sides the En are eigenfunctions of the eigenvalue problem,
Ñ2 E + \lambda2 E = 0,        ÑE ·
^
n
 
= 0   on the tank side walls.
Evolution equations for the an(t) can be obtained by taking inner products of the linearised equation of motion,
\rho  \partialv

\partialt
= -  1

\rho
ÑP + F
with the normal irrotational wave modes. For unforced waves each evolution equation is just a simple harmonic oscillator, but method is most useful when the body force F represents more than simple gravity. It is neatly manifested by a forcing term in the SHM evolution equation. It is not necessary to assume F irrotational.


Several applications will be considered: magnetic damping of surface waves, nonlinear oscillations in a tank, and the Faraday experiment.

Date received: September 8, 1999


Copyright © 1999 by the author(s). The author(s) of this document and the organizers of the conference have granted their consent to include this abstract in Atlas Conferences Inc. Document # cadl-21.