Waves on Fluid-Loaded Inhomogeneous Elastic Shells of Arbitrary Shape

1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 384-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. Pierce

A generalization of the Donnell model for a thin shell of arbitrary shape, and with position-dependent elastic and geometric properties, is used to formulate a wave theory for quasi-straight-crested waves of constant frequency propagating over the shell’s surface. The principal restriction on the theory is that the wavenumber components must be large compared with the two principal curvatures. A simple method for including fluid loading in the model yields a finite local specific radiation impedance even when the waves on the surface are moving with the fluid’s sound speed. The overall model is then used to derive a general dispersion relation which connects frequency and wavenumber components for the fundamental waves of the fluid-shell system.

2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
F. E. Snodgrass

Several satisfactory instruments are available for recording the height and period of ocean waves, and new improved gages for this purpose are being designed. The actual procurement of wave data is no longer a major problem, but the present theories interpreting these data and the methods of data analysis leave much to be desired. Definitions of characteristic wave height and wave period are vague, as no specific period of observation is designated for determining these measurements. Analysis techniques and results are inconsistent. Preliminary studies of the statistical distribution of wave heights are encouraging, but no simple method of describing the waves with regard to period has been developed. Current hydrodynamic wave theory is apparently in error, and reexamination of this basic theory in regard to the hydrodynamic attenuation factor should be made.


2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (15) ◽  
pp. 829-839
Author(s):  
R. T. Tagiyeva ◽  
M. Saglam

Localized magnetostatic waves and magnetic polaritons at the junction of the magnetic material and magnetic superlattice composed of the alternating ferromagnetic or ferromagnetic and nonmagnetic layers are investigated in the framework of the electromagnetic wave theory in Voigt geometry. The general dispersion relation for localized magnetic polaritons and magnetostatic waves (MW) are derived in the long-wavelength limit. The dispersion curves and frequency region of the exsistence of the localized MW and magnetic polaritons are calculated numerically.


1957 ◽  
Vol 1 (02) ◽  
pp. 27-55
Author(s):  
John P. Breslin

It is demonstrated in this paper2 that the deepwater wave drag of a hydrofoil of finite span can be found directly from the theory developed largely for ship hydrodynamics by Havelock and others. The wave drag is then studied at high Froude numbers and from the observed behavior the induced drag of the hydrofoil can be deduced from existing aerodynamic formulas. Evaluation of the resulting formulas is effected for two arbitrary load distributions and a comparison with some model test results is made. A practical approximation which gives the influence of gravity over a range of high Froude numbers is found and from this one can deduce a Froude number beyond which the effects of gravity may be ignored. It is also shown that an expression for the waves at some distance aft of the hydrofoil can be deduced from the general formulas developed for ship hydrodynamics. A discussion of the wave pattern is given with particular emphasis on the centerline profile at high Froude numbers and a contrast is pointed out in regard to the results of the two-dimensional theory for the hydrofoil waves and wave resistance.


In this paper and in part II, we give the theory of a distinctive type of wave motion, which arises in any one-dimensional flow problem when there is an approximate functional relation at each point between the flow q (quantity passing a given point in unit time) and concentration k (quantity per unit distance). The wave property then follows directly from the equation of continuity satisfied by q and k . In view of this, these waves are described as ‘kinematic’, as distinct from the classical wave motions, which depend also on Newton’s second law of motion and are therefore called ‘dynamic’. Kinematic waves travel with the velocity dq/dk , and the flow q remains constant on each kinematic wave. Since the velocity of propagation of each wave depends upon the value of q carried by it, successive waves may coalesce to form ‘kinematic shock waves ’. From the point of view of kinematic wave theory, there is a discontinuous increase in q at a shock, but in reality a shock wave is a relatively narrow region in which (owing to the rapid increase of q ) terms neglected by the flow concentration relation become important. The general properties of kinematic waves and shock waves are discussed in detail in §1. One example included in §1 is the interpretation of the group-velocity phenomenon in a dispersive medium as a particular case of the kinematic wave phenomenon. The remainder of part I is devoted to a detailed treatment of flood movement in long rivers, a problem in which kinematic waves play the leading role although dynamic waves (in this case, the long gravity waves) also appear. First (§2), we consider the variety of factors which can influence the approximate flow-concentration relation, and survey the various formulae which have been used in attempts to describe it. Then follows a more mathematical section (§3) in which the role of the dynamic waves is clarified. From the full equations of motion for an idealized problem it is shown that at the ‘Froude numbers’ appropriate to flood waves, the dynamic waves are rapidly attenuated and the main disturbance is carried downstream by the kinematic waves; some account is then given of the behaviour of the flow at higher Froude numbers. Also in §3, the full equations of motion are used to investigate the structure of the kinematic shock; for this problem, the shock is the ‘monoclinal flood wave’ which is well known in the literature of this subject. The final sections (§§4 and 5) contain the application of the theory of kinematic waves to the determination of flood movement. In §4 it is shown how the waves (including shock waves) travelling downstream from an observation point may be deduced from a knowledge of the variation with time of the flow at the observation point; this section then concludes with a brief account of the effect on the waves of tributaries and run-off. In §5, the modifications (similar to diffusion effects) which arise due to the slight dependence of the flow-concentration curve on the rate of change of flow or concentration, are described and methods for their inclusion in the theory are given.


Author(s):  
M.A.A. Khattab ◽  
D.J. Burns ◽  
R.J. Pick ◽  
J.C. Thompson

In this paper, techniques are developed to handle the integrable singularities of the integral proposed by Burns and Oore for the estimation of opening mode stress intensity factors for embedded planar defects of arbitrary shape. The hybrid numerical-analytical integration techniques developed consider separately two crack front zones and one interior zone of the crack surface. Parameters are established for the sizing of the integration elements within each zone. Studies of elliptical defects with aspect ratios between 1 and 10 demonstrate the accuracy and efficiency of this procedure for computing opening mode stress intensity factors. A simple method which compensates for the quadrature error associated with computationally inexpensive, coarse grids is outlined.


1973 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 253-256
Author(s):  
W. C. Beattie

A simple method is described for measuring torque in induction motor drives. This is applicable to constant voltage, constant frequency systems, an accuracy of 5% being anticipated. Some practical tests with a small machine show the range over which a linear relationship is possible, it being anticipated that improved linearity would be possible with larger drives.


Kelvin’s classical ship-wave theory (Thomson 1891) gives an asymptotic form for the waves generated by a pressure point moving over a water surface. This paper presents a method of working out the asymptotic expansions which is simpler than those of the various previous theories, although it does not give new or more accurate results. The technique used is due to Lighthill (1958, 1960). The case in which the water has infinite depth is considered in detail, and corresponding results when the depth is finite are deduced. A final section considers the effect of surface tension.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document