Publication | Closed Access
The Maximum Sinkage of a Ship
31
Citations
7
References
2001
Year
Marine HydrodynamicsHydroelasticityCoastal EngineeringShip ManeuveringOcean EngineeringEngineeringStrength Of ShipShip DesignCivil EngineeringFluid MechanicsStern DisplacementShip ResistanceMarine EngineeringShallow WaterMultiphase FlowHydrodynamic StabilityConstant Depth HMaximum Sinkage
A ship moving steadily forward in shallow water of constant depth h is usually subject to downward forces and hence squat, which is a potentially dangerous sinkage or increase in draft. Sinkage increases with ship speed, until it reaches a maximum at just below the critical speed Here we use both a linear transcritical shallow-water equation and a fully dispersive finite-depth theory to discuss the flow near that critical speed and to compute the maximum sinkage, trim angle, and stern displacement for some example hulls.
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