TY - JOUR
T1 - Time-dependent nonlinear gravity-capillary surface waves with viscous dissipation and wind forcing
AU - Shelton, Josh
AU - Milewski, Paul
AU - Trinh, Philippe H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press.
PY - 2025/1/14
Y1 - 2025/1/14
N2 - We develop a time-dependent conformal method to study the effect of viscosity on steep surface waves. When the effect of surface tension is included, numerical solutions are found that contain highly oscillatory parasitic capillary ripples. These small-amplitude ripples are associated with the high curvature at the crest of the underlying viscous-gravity wave, and display asymmetry about the wave crest. Previous inviscid studies of steep surface waves have calculated intricate bifurcation structures that appear for small surface tension. We show numerically that viscosity suppresses these. While the discrete solution branches still appear, they collapse to form a single smooth branch in the limit of small surface tension. These solutions are shown to be temporally stable, both to small superharmonic perturbations in a linear stability analysis, and to some larger amplitude perturbations in different initial-value problems. Our work provides a convenient method for the numerical computation and analysis of water waves with viscosity, without evaluating the free-boundary problem for the full Navier-Stokes equations, which becomes increasingly challenging at larger Reynolds numbers.
AB - We develop a time-dependent conformal method to study the effect of viscosity on steep surface waves. When the effect of surface tension is included, numerical solutions are found that contain highly oscillatory parasitic capillary ripples. These small-amplitude ripples are associated with the high curvature at the crest of the underlying viscous-gravity wave, and display asymmetry about the wave crest. Previous inviscid studies of steep surface waves have calculated intricate bifurcation structures that appear for small surface tension. We show numerically that viscosity suppresses these. While the discrete solution branches still appear, they collapse to form a single smooth branch in the limit of small surface tension. These solutions are shown to be temporally stable, both to small superharmonic perturbations in a linear stability analysis, and to some larger amplitude perturbations in different initial-value problems. Our work provides a convenient method for the numerical computation and analysis of water waves with viscosity, without evaluating the free-boundary problem for the full Navier-Stokes equations, which becomes increasingly challenging at larger Reynolds numbers.
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U2 - 10.1017/jfm.2024.1227
DO - 10.1017/jfm.2024.1227
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85215427435
SN - 0022-1120
VL - 1003
JO - Journal of Fluid Mechanics
JF - Journal of Fluid Mechanics
M1 - A13
ER -