Publication | Open Access
Synthetic Aperture Radar observations of resonantly generated internal solitary waves at Race Point Channel (Cape Cod)
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Citations
36
References
2008
Year
Ebb TideOcean DynamicsCoastal EngineeringEngineeringOceanographyWave MotionCoastal HydrodynamicsEarth ScienceGeophysicsComplex Sea StateMassachusetts BayWave DynamicsOcean Internal WaveSynthetic Aperture RadarCape CodSediment TransportRadarTidal DynamicsRace Point ChannelInternal Solitary WavesInternal Waves
Synthetic Aperture Radar images revealed the two‐dimensional propagation characteristics of short‐period internal solitary waves in Race Point Channel in Massachusetts Bay. The images and in situ measurements of the flow in the channel are used to infer the likely generation mechanism of the waves. The solitary waves are generated during the ebb phase of the tide within the channel. On some occasions, two trains of internal waves are generated presumably at the same location but at slightly different phases of the ebb tide. The main characteristics of the (two‐layer) flow are described based on the criticality of the Froude number. It is suggested that these two individual packets of waves result from flow passage through resonance (where the Froude number is one). One packet is generated as the flow passes through the transcritical regime during the acceleration phase of the (ebb) tidal current, and another packet is generated during the deceleration phase. Both packets propagate upstream when the tide slacks, but with slightly different propagation directions.
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