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Waves

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Waves Laird Hamilton riding the Wave (Riding Giants) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Waves


1
Waves
Laird Hamilton riding the Wave (Riding Giants)
2
Waves
  • When undisturbed by wind (or some other factor
    such as an earthquake), the sea surface is
    naturally smooth!
  • Waves are moving energy and begin as a
    disturbance
  • Wind blowing across the surface of the ocean
    generates most waves
  • Tides, turbidity currents, coastal landslides,
    calving icebergs, and sea floor movement can also
    cause waves

3
Waves
  • In an ocean wave, energy is moving at the speed
    of the wave, but water is not!
  • Waves move energy, with very little movement of
    particles (including water particles!)
  • The water associated with a wave does not move
    continuously across the sea surface!

4
  • Imagine a seagull resting on the ocean surface
  • The bird moves in circles up and forward as the
    tops of the waves move toward its position, and
    down and backward as tops of the waves move past
  • Energy in the waves flows past the bird, but the
    gull and its patch of water move only a short
    distance

Each circle is equal in diameter to the wave
height
5
Orbital Waves
  • As a wave travels, the water passes the energy
    along by moving in a circular path, called an
    orbit
  • An wave in which water particles move in closed
    circles is called an orbital wave
  • Because the wave form moves forward, orbital
    waves are a type of progressive wave

6
Orbital Waves
  • The bigger the wave, the larger the size of the
    orbit
  • The diameter of the orbit diminishes rapidly with
    depth

Wave motion is negligible when orbits reach a
diameter that is 1/23 of those at the surface
7
Wave motion is negligible below a depth of one
half of the wavelength
8
Components of a Wave
  • Ocean waves has distinct parts
  • Wave crest highest part of the wave above
    average water level
  • Wave trough lowest part of the wave below
    average water level
  • Wave height the vertical distance between a wave
    crest and its trough
  • Wavelength the horizontal distance between 2
    successive crests, or troughs

9
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10
Making Waves
  • Ocean waves are classified by
  • the disturbing force that creates them
  • the extent to which the disturbing force
    continues to influence the waves once they are
    formed
  • The restoring force that works to flatten them
  • Their wavelength

11
Making Waves
  • Energy that causes waves to form is called a
    disturbing force
  • Wind blowing across the ocean surface provides
    the disturbing force to generate capillary waves
    (waves lt1.73 cm) and wind waves
  • Landslides and tectonic processes (volcanic
    eruptions, faulting of the sea floor) are the
    disturbing forces for seismic sea waves, or
    tsunamis

12
Making Waves
  • The restoring force seeks to return the water to
    flatness after a wave has formed in it gravity
    provides the restoring force on all waves gt1.73cm

13
Wavelength is the most useful measure of wave size
14
Deep vs. shallow water waves
  • Waves moving through water deeper than ½ their
    wavelength are deep water waves
  • Example A wind wave with a 20m wavelength is
    considered to be a deep water wave so long as it
    is passing through water gt10m deep
  • Waves in water shallower than 1/20 their
    wavelength are shallow water waves
  • Example A wave with a 20m wavelength will act as
    a shallow-water wave if the water is lt1m deep

15
Shallow water waves
  • When a wave approaches the shore, its proximity
    to the bottom flattens out the orbits of water
    molecules
  • Causes the water at the bottom to move back and
    forth no longer in a circular pattern

16
Ocean Motion
  • In the ocean, only capillary and wind waves can
    be deep water waves
  • Why???
  • Remember, deep water waves occur when moving
    through water deeper than half their wavelength

17
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18
Gee, thats just swell
  • Generally speaking, the longer the wavelength,
    the faster the wave
  • When waves move away from their area of
    origination, wind speeds diminish and they
    eventually move faster than the wind
  • Mature waves from a storm sort themselves into
    groups of waves with similar wavelengths and
    speeds as they outrun their smaller relatives

19
Gee, thats just swell
  • This results in swells uniform, symmetrical wind
    waves that have traveled out of their area of
    origination

20
When waves meet
  • Because longer waves will outrun shorter waves,
    wind waves from different storm systems can
    interfere with one another
  • When waves meet, they add to or subtract from one
    another
  • Such interaction is called interference
  • Constructive additive
  • Destructive subtractive (cancellation)

21
Dude, constructive and destructive waves rule
  • Surfers depend on constructive and destructive
    waves to generate their wave sets
  • Constructive interference between waves of
    different wavelengths create the sought-after big
    waves
  • Destructive interference diminishes the waves and
    makes it easier for the surfer to swim back out

22
  • Constructive crests of waves coincide
  • Destructive crest and trough of waves coincide

23
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24
Going Rogue
  • Occasionally, wind waves of many wavelengths can
    approach a single point/spot from different
    directions
  • A huge wave crest develops suddenly from the
    constructive interference, generated a rogue wave
  • Rogue waves are much larger than surrounding
    waves and can be extremely hazardous

25
Just how big can waves be?
26
Just how big can waves be?
  • The size of waves depends on
  • Wind strength
  • Wind duration
  • Fetch (distance over which the wind blows)
  • A strong wind must blow continuously in one
    direction for 3 days for the largest waves to
    develop
  • The greatest potential for large waves occurs
    beneath the strong and nearly continuous winds
    surrounding Antarctica

27
Some personal experience
28
Photo taken here (bridge)
50 ft
A photograph of a wave taken from the bridge 50
feet above sea level
29
70-foot wave crossing the Southern Ocean
30
Encountering The Perfect Storm just north of
Antarctica (Ross Sea, Southern Ocean)
31
When ocean waves encounter land
  • Deep water waves change to shallow water waves as
    they approach the shore
  • Once the wave passes over water whose depth is
    less than one half its wavelength, the wave
    feels the bottom
  • When this happens, the circular motion of the
    water molecules in the wave is interrupted
  • Orbits flatten to ellipses near the bottom

32
When ocean waves encounter land
  • The waves energy must now be packed into less
    water depth, and so the wave crests become
    peaked, rather than rounded
  • Interaction with the bottom slows the incoming
    wave, but waves behind it continue toward shore
    at their original speed
  • This results in a bunching up of the waves,
    which decreases their wavelength, but increases
    their height

33
Surfs Up!
  • When the wave steepness reaches the 17 ratio
    (waves height is 7x it wavelength), the wave
    will break as surf

34
How to score an epic wave
  • Waves break along the shore in different ways
  • Waves are influenced by
  • The bottom slope (the steeper the slope, the more
    violent and toppling the wave)
  • Contour and composition of the bottom (gradually
    shoaling bottoms sap waves of their strength as
    the wave loses energy interacting with the
    bottom)
  • Localized winds and fetch

35
Why is surfing so much better along the west
coast of the U.S. than the east? (no offense)
NOT Long Island
36
Waves refract when they approach a shore at an
angle
  • Waves usually approach the shore at an angle
  • Different parts of the wave is at different
    depths, so the wave must bend, or refract as
    parts of the wave reaches shallower water and
    slows
  • The slowing and bending of waves in shallow water
    is called wave refraction the waves refract in a
    line nearly parallel to the shore

37
Waves refract when they approach a shore at an
angle
38
Big Waves Storm Surge
39
Big Waves Tsunamis
  • The Japanese term for large, often destructive
    waves that occasionally roll into their harbors
    is tsunami (tsu harbor nami wave)
  • Tsunamis originate from sudden changes in the sea
    floor caused by tectonic activity (undersea
    volcanic eruptions, faulting, collapse of large
    oceanic volcanoes) and even underwater avalanches
    such as those caused by turbidity currents

40
Tsunamis
  • The majority of tsunamis are caused by fault
    movement
  • Underwater fault movement displaces the earths
    crust, generates earthquakes, and if it ruptures
    the seafloor, produces a sudden change in water
    level at the ocean surface (up or down)
  • The wavelength of a tsunami is 125 miles, so it
    is a shallow water wave everywhere in the ocean

41
Tsunamis
  • In the open ocean, tsunamis travel at speeds gt435
    miles per hour
  • Tsunamis in the open ocean have heights of only
    0.5 meters (1.6 feet)!
  • However, once they approach the shore, they slow
    in the shallow water and increase in wave height
  • Surges ashore mistaken for an extremely high
    tide and so mistakenly called tidal waves

42
Abrupt vertical movement along a fault on the sea
floor raises or drops water column creating a
tsunami that travels from deep to shallow water
43
Killer Waves
  • 86 of all tsunamis occur in the Pacific Ocean
    (Why?)
  • On December 26, 2004, an enormous earthquake
    struck off the coast of Sumatra in Indonesia
  • Occurred 19 miles beneath the sea floor near the
    Sunda Trench, where the Indian Plate is being
    subducted beneath the Eurasian Plate
  • Ruptured 750 miles of sea floor!

44
Killer Waves
  • This thrusted the seafloor upward, displacing gt30
    feet of water above it
  • The resulting tsunami spread across the Indian
    Ocean, literally washing away many coastal
    villages and causing approximartely 300,000 human
    deaths in Indonesia (esp. Thailand) and along
    coastal India and Africa
  • Although much smaller, the tsunami was also
    detected in the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic
    Oceans!

45
Indonesian capital of Banda Aceh (before tsunami)
46
Indonesian capital of Banda Aceh (after tsunami)
47
Sequence of photos of tsunami inundating Chedi
Resort in Phuket, Thailand on December 26, 2004
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