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Welcome to Geosc040, March 31; Lecture 21 Waves, Tsunami & Tides Pontoon Little Big town Sea of Love The National Waterfalls TLC Swim Jack's Mannequin Thanks to Roman K & Kierstin E. • Quiz 2 April 13. Calculators will be provided –but I doubt you’ll need one • On-line Assignments 10 and 11 due next week. • Extra Credit Letter accepted until 11pm April 6 Read about the Ocean My Job in Geosc040 100 Thomas is a big room. Talking is distracting to your neighbors… Don’t chat during lecture slides Wait for clicker questions Wind Generates Ocean Waves Capillary waves become gravity waves as their wavelength exceeds 1.74 centimeters. These wind-induced gravity waves (wind waves) continue to grow as long as the wind above them exceeds their speed. Wind Waves • Waves “break” when oversteepened, thus the “whitecaps” observed in strongly wind-driven seas • Observations suggest that maximum wind waves have L ≈ 800 meters; this is equivalent to T of nearly 23 sec and S about 36 m/sec (or 130 km/hr). Whew!! --the highest, confirmed windwave height is about 34 meters!! Ugh! Three Main Factors in Wave Generation by Wind •1) Wind strength (avg. or persistent wind velocity) •2) Wind duration (time that wind blows in one general direction) •3) Fetch (distance over which wind blows uninterrupte d in one direction) w L SWL c S SWL n Wave Definitions H d DEFINITIONS L= wavelength [meters] S= Wave speed [meters/sec] T= wave period, time for one wavelength to pass [seconds] d= water depth [meters] Wavelength L For deep water waves, we can describe the relationship between wave length, wave period and wave speed. We need to use a few simple equations. 1) S = L / T, 2) S = 1.56 T, 3) L =1.56 T2 (S is speed in m/s, T is period in sec, and L is wavelength in m.) Wave size and period. What happens at the beach? Are waves all the same or is there a big one every so often? At a typical beach, say along the outer banks, this is what the wave heights look like in a day At a typical beach, say along the outer banks, this is what the wave heights look like in a day Wave height at the beach Most waves have a period between 1 and 10 seconds For deep water waves, that means a speed between 1.56 m/s and 15.6 m/s Recall: S = 1.56 T Today’s Clicker Questions A. I will receive full credit for answering 80% or more of the questions B. I will receive no credit if I answer less than 80% of the questions C. If there are 10 questions and I answer at least 8 of them I’ll get full credit for today (100%); If I answer 7 or fewer questions, I will receive no credit for today. D. If I answer the question correctly I’ll get a bonus point, up to a maximum of 105% for today’s in-class exercise E. All of the above (this is the correct answer, choose E!) Extra credit letters are worth up to 5% of my final course grade, and: A. are due Apr 6th and will be subject to electronic plagiarism checking via Turnitin.psu.com. Letters will be checked against everything on the web and previous papers submitted for this and other classes B. must be submitted as a file named with MY NAME. For example if my name were Jane Doe, myfile would be named: DoeJane_geosc040.docx or DoeJane_geosc040.pdf C. are submitted via Angel Dropbox by uploading my file. I will not copy the text of my letter and paste it into the Angel page. D. All of the above E. I do not intend to submit an Extra Credit Letter Wave Diffraction Waves bend! Diffraction Wave Interference Waves can “interfere” with one another Constructive interference means that waves interact to build crests or troughs higher or deeper than those of the original waves Destructive interference means that waves cancel one another out Such interactions produce characteristic patterns or “beats” --every fourth, fifth, sixth (etc.) wave is larger than the other waves in the group. Surfers learn how to capitalize on these patterns Wave Interference This has a really cool analog in sound and acoustics https://academo.org/demos/waveinterference-beat-frequency/ Wave Interference Waves can “interfere” with one another Constructive interference means that waves interact to build crests or troughs higher or deeper than those of the original waves Destructive interference means that waves cancel one another out Such interactions produce characteristic patterns or “beats” --every fourth, fifth, sixth (etc.) wave is larger than the other waves in the group. Surfers learn how to capitalize on these patterns Wave Interference Waves can “interfere” with one another Constructive interference means that waves interact to build crests or troughs higher or deeper than those of the original waves Destructive interference means that waves cancel one another out Such interactions produce characteristic patterns or “beats” --every fourth, fifth, sixth (etc.) wave is larger than the other waves in the group. Surfers learn how to capitalize on these patterns Wave Diffraction Three Main Factors in Wave Generation by Wind •1) Wind strength (avg. or persistent wind velocity) •2) Wind duration (time that wind blows in one general direction) •3) Fetch (distance over which wind blows uninterrupte d in one direction) Wave Generation by Wind How Big is Big? • Steepness of a wave flank does not exceed about 120 degrees • A “rule of thumb”: H/L is a ratio of 1/7 (remember this!) • A wave with L=156 m in our example above can have H≤22 m! Wavelength L Wave Height H Wave Generation by Wind How Big is Big? • Steepness of a wave flank does not exceed about 120 degrees • A “rule of thumb”: H/L is a ratio of 1/7 (remember this!) • A wave with L=156 m in our example above can have H≤22 m! Wavelength L Wave Height H Wind Waves • Waves “break” when oversteepened, thus the “whitecaps” observed in strongly wind-driven seas Big Waves Travel in Packs! Wave Train Swells: An example of long-period swells outrunning swells of shorter period Wave Train! The package of waves (train) moves slower than individual waves Wave Train! The package of waves (train) moves slower than individual waves Big Waves Travel in Packs! Wave Train Think of the Peloton https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peloton Predicting Storm Impact at Beaches and at Sea wave trains travel at a rate of 1/2 the velocity of individual waves Wave Train! The package of waves (train) moves slower than individual waves wave trains travel at a rate of 1/2 the velocity of individual waves Come on Baby Take the Wave Train Direction of Wave Train Travel 4 3 2 5 5 6 4 6 7 6 2 3 5 3 4 5 1 4 2 3 • An individual wave does not persist long distances across the ocean--wave trains form (waves travel as groups) --the front waves continually die out because of the energy required to “spin up” water through which they pass --orbital motion remains after wavetrain passage and waves are added to back of train to replace waves lost at front (individual waves last only as long as it takes to travel through the wave train) --because of this, wave trains travel at a rate of 1/2 the velocity of individual waves (whoa! even though individual waves obey the equations we have studied). My Job in Geosc040 100 Thomas is a big room. Talking is distracting to your neighbors… Don’t chat during lecture slides Wait for clicker questions Types of Waves Defined in terms of Water Depth Only some of the molecules in the water column are involved in a deep-water wave… Shallow-Water Waves • Speed is related to water depth d: S =(g d)1/2 • Waves are slower in shallower water: d=10 m, s=10 m/s; d=5 m, s=7 m/s; d=1 m, s=3.2 m/s Wavelength (L) and speed (S) decrease while period T remains constant S = L/T piru.alexandria.ucsb.edu/~tierney Wave Sets in Shallow Water Note: increase in wave height and more peak shaped waves as they shallow near beach Shallow-Water Waves • Speed is related to water depth d: S =(g d)1/2 • Waves are slower in shallower water: d=10 m, s=10 m/s; • d=5 m, s=7 m/s; d=1 m, s=3.2 m/s Wavelength (L) and speed (S) decrease while period T remains constant S = L/T piru.alexandria.ucsb.edu/~tierney Speed (or Celerity) of Shallow-Water Waves • Speed is related only to water depth d (not L or T as in deep-water waves) • S = (g d)1/2 thus, waves move slower in shallow water • At the shore the celerity of the base of a wave is slower than the wave crest (friction with the bottom slows the body • In words-- the crest moves somewhat faster than the body of a wave, and the wave “breaks” (when H=0.75d) • So a 3 meter wave breaks in 4 meters water depth • The slope of the bottom locally determines whether a “breaker” plunges (e.g., a “tube”) or spills (plungers characteristic of steep slopes, spillers of gradual slopes) Shallow-Water Waves • Speed is related to water depth d: S =(g d)1/2 • Waves are slower in shallower water: Wave Sets in Shallow Water constant period & wavelength wave set approaching coast Note: increase in wave height and more peak shaped waves as they shallow near beach • • • • Speed (Celerity) of Shallow-Water Waves Speed is related to water depth d Waves are slower in shallower water Wave “breaks” when H = 0.75 d A 3 meter wave (H) breaks in 4 meters water depth (d) Reason for Concern When and Why Do They Occur and How Can We Protect Coastal Regions? Tsunami are Shallow Water waves! What Causes Tsunami? • Any event that causes displacement of large amounts of water including: – Earthquakes and associated seafloor uplift or depression – Landslides or submarine slides/slumps – Volcanic eruptions The resulting water motion creates a wave trough or crest that then moves in all directions away from the event--a tsunami Tsunami Tsunami means “harbor wave.” They are caused by reverse or normal faults that rupture in the shallow ocean crust. Waves can travel at 800 km/hr in the open ocean. Once the waves reach shallow shorelines, they are slowed down and the water “piles up” forming large amplitude waves. The shorelines around the Atlantic Ocean are at much smaller risk for tsunami damage than those of the Pacific Ocean because the major faults in the Atlantic Ocean are transform faults, which do not move vertically. (No vertical motion = no tsunami) An exception was the Lisbon earthquake of 1755, which caused tsunami damage on the east coast of the U.S., but, as we will see, volcano collapse & undersea landslides could be an issue. How Fast Do Tsunami Travel? • Tsunami are “shallow-water” waves, even while traveling over the deep ocean! [Why is this?] • Shallow-water waves travel at velocities proportional to the square root of the gravitational constant times the water depth (yup, S=(gd)1/2) • So, if the average depth of the ocean is 3.8 km, a tsunami travels about 695 km/hr. For comparison, most normal windgenerated waves travel about 55 km/hr in deep water (a little faster than a car on Beaver Avenue). • In the deeper parts of ocean basins (the Pacific averages 4.8 km deep), tsunami could travel 800 km/hr. • Tsunami waves are “refracted” (change directions) as their velocities increase or decrease with changes in ocean depth. Damage from Tsunamis • Hilo, Hawaii, 1960 • Anchorage, Alaska, 1964 Andaman-Nicobar Earthquake • Magnitude 9.0 • Dec. 26 2004 The December 26th Tsunami • Model simulation of the tsunami. For eastern Indian Ocean only. -red is the crest -blue is a trough Simulation from Delft Hydraulics