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On the initiation of surface waves by turbulent shear flow
Institution:1. Environmental Sciences Institute, University of Castilla-La Mancha, Avenida Carlos III s/n, 45071, Toledo, Spain;2. Departamento de Matemática Aplicada a la Ingeniería Industrial, E.T.S.I. Industriales, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, c/ José Gutiérrez Abascal, 2, 28006 Madrid, Spain;3. ENSTA ParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, 828 bd des Maréchaux, 91762 Palaiseau cedex France;4. IPSL, LMD, CNRS, Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau, France;5. Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Barcelona, Spain;1. Department of Radiology, Zhongshan Hospital, Shanghai Medical School, Fudan, University, Shanghai Medical Imaging Institute, No. 180 Fenglin Road, Xuhui, District, Shanghai 200032, China;2. Department of Pathology, Zhongshan Hospital, Shanghai Medical School, Fudan University, No. 180 Fenglin Road, Xuhui District, Shanghai 200032, China
Abstract:An analytical model is developed for the initial stage of surface wave generation at an air–water interface by a turbulent shear flow in either the air or in the water. The model treats the problem of wave growth departing from a flat interface and is relevant for small waves whose forcing is dominated by turbulent pressure fluctuations. The wave growth is predicted using the linearised and inviscid equations of motion, essentially following Phillips Phillips, O.M., 1957. On the generation of waves by turbulent wind. J. Fluid Mech. 2, 417–445], but the pressure fluctuations that generate the waves are treated as unsteady and related to the turbulent velocity field using the rapid-distortion treatment of Durbin Durbin, P.A., 1978. Rapid distortion theory of turbulent flows. PhD thesis, University of Cambridge]. This model, which assumes a constant mean shear rate Γ, can be viewed as the simplest representation of an oceanic or atmospheric boundary layer.For turbulent flows in the air and in the water producing pressure fluctuations of similar magnitude, the waves generated by turbulence in the water are found to be considerably steeper than those generated by turbulence in the air. For resonant waves, this is shown to be due to the shorter decorrelation time of turbulent pressure in the air (estimated as  1/Γ), because of the higher shear rate existing in the air flow, and due to the smaller length scale of the turbulence in the water. Non-resonant waves generated by turbulence in the water, although being somewhat gentler, are still steeper than resonant waves generated by turbulence in the air. Hence, it is suggested that turbulence in the water may have a more important role than previously thought in the initiation of the surface waves that are subsequently amplified by feedback instability mechanisms.
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