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Rayleigh–Bloch surface waves along periodic gratings and their connection with trapped modes in waveguides
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1999
Year
Rayleigh–bloch Surface WavesEngineeringSurface WaveWave OpticWave MotionWave PhysicsWave LoadingWave TheoryOcean AcousticsInterface PhysicsOptical PropertiesGuided-wave OpticWave AnalysisWave HydrodynamicsWave DynamicsTrapped ModesPhotonicsOcean Wave MechanicsPhysicsWave PropagationPeriodic GratingsRayleigh–bloch WavesLocalized WaveOcean EngineeringApplied PhysicsInternal Waves
Rayleigh–Bloch surface waves are acoustic or electromagnetic waves which propagate parallel to a two-dimensional diffraction grating and which are exponentially damped with distance from the grating. In the water-wave context they describe a localized wave having dominant wavenumber β travelling along an infinite periodic array of identical bottom-mounted cylinders having uniform cross-section throughout the water depth. A numerical method is described which enables the frequencies of the Rayleigh–Bloch waves to be determined as a function of β for an arbitrary cylinder cross-section. For particular symmetric cylinders, it is shown how a special choice of β produces results for the trapped mode frequencies and mode shapes in the vicinity of any (finite) number of cylinders spanning a rectangular waveguide or channel. It is also shown how one particular choice of β gives rise to a new type of trapped mode near an unsymmetric cylinder contained within a parallel-sided waveguide with locally-distorted walls. The implications for large forces due to incident waves on a large but finite number of such cylinders in the ocean is discussed.