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ratio test needs to look at the absolute value of the ratio. Certainly 1-2+3-4+5-6+7-8+.... does not converge, and the ratio without taking the absolute value is -1, which is r<1.
en>TowerOfBricks
m Convergence tests: Improved math formatting
 
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{{About|dispersion of waves on a water surface|other forms of dispersion|Dispersion (disambiguation)}}
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In [[fluid dynamics]], '''dispersion''' of [[ocean surface wave|water waves]] generally refers to [[Dispersion relation|frequency dispersion]], which means that [[wave]]s of different [[wavelength]]s travel at different [[phase speed]]s. Water waves, in this context, are waves propagating on the [[water]] [[surface]], and forced by [[Earth's gravity|gravity]] and [[surface tension]]. As a result, [[water (molecule)|water]] with a [[free surface]] is generally considered to be a [[dispersion relation|dispersive medium]].
 
Surface gravity waves, moving under the forcing by gravity, propagate faster for increasing [[wavelength]]. For a given wavelength, gravity waves in deeper water have a larger [[phase speed]] than in [[shallow water equations|shallower water]]. In contrast with this, [[capillary wave]]s only forced by surface tension, propagate faster for shorter wavelengths.
 
Besides frequency dispersion, water waves also exhibit amplitude dispersion. This is a [[nonlinear]] effect, by which waves of larger [[amplitude]] have a different phase speed from small-amplitude waves.
 
==Frequency dispersion for surface gravity waves==
This section is about frequency dispersion for waves on a fluid layer forced by gravity, and according to linear theory.
 
===Wave propagation and dispersion===
[[File:Sine wave amplitude.svg|thumb|right|388px|Sinusoidal wave.]]
The simplest [[wave propagation|propagating wave]] of unchanging form is a [[sine wave]]. A sine wave with water surface [[elevation]] ''η(&nbsp;x,&nbsp;t&nbsp;)'' is given by:<ref name=Lamb366>See Lamb (1994), §229, pp. 366–369.</ref>
 
:<math>\eta(x,t) = a \sin \left( \theta(x,t) \right),\,</math>
 
where ''a'' is the [[amplitude]] (in metres) and ''θ&nbsp;=&nbsp;θ(&nbsp;x,&nbsp;t&nbsp;)'' is the phase function (in [[radian]]s), depending on the horizontal position (&nbsp;''x''&nbsp;, in metres) and time (&nbsp;''t''&nbsp;, in [[second]]s):<ref name=Whit11>See Whitham (1974), p.11.</ref>
 
:<math>\theta = 2\pi \left( \frac{x}{\lambda} - \frac{t}{T} \right) = k x - \omega t,</math> &nbsp; with &nbsp; <math>k = \frac{2\pi}{\lambda}</math> &nbsp; and &nbsp; <math>\omega = \frac{2\pi}{T},</math>
 
where:
* ''λ'' is the [[wavelength]] (in metres),
* ''T'' is the [[Periodic function|period]] (in seconds),
* ''k'' is the [[wavenumber]] (in radians per metre) and
* ''ω'' is the [[angular frequency]] (in radians per second).
 
Characteristic phases of a water wave are:
* the upward zero-crossing at ''θ&nbsp;=&nbsp;0'',
* the wave [[crest (physics)|crest]] at ''θ&nbsp;=&nbsp;''½''&nbsp;π'',
* the downward zero-crossing at ''θ&nbsp;=&nbsp;π'' and
* the wave [[trough (physics)|trough]] at ''θ&nbsp;=&nbsp;1½&nbsp;π''.
A certain phase repeats itself after an [[integer]] ''m'' multiple of ''2π'': sin(''θ'')&nbsp;=&nbsp;sin(''θ+m•2π'').
 
Essential for water waves, and other wave phenomena in [[physics]], is that free propagating waves of non-zero amplitude only exist when the angular frequency ''ω'' and wavenumber ''k'' (or equivalently the wavelength ''λ'' and period ''T'' ) satisfy a [[function (mathematics)|functional relationship]]: the frequency dispersion relation<ref>This dispersion relation is for a non-moving [[homogeneity (physics)|homogeneous]] [[transmission medium|medium]], so in case of water waves for a constant water depth and no mean current.</ref><ref name=Phil37>See Phillips (1977), p. 37.</ref>
 
:<math>\omega^2 = \Omega^2(k).\,</math>
 
The dispersion relation has two solutions: ''ω&nbsp;=&nbsp;+Ω(k)'' and ''ω&nbsp;=&nbsp;-Ω(k)'', corresponding to waves travelling in the positive or negative ''x''–direction. The dispersion relation will in general depend on several other parameters in addition to the wavenumber ''k''. For gravity waves, according to linear theory, these are the [[Earth's gravity|acceleration by gravity]] and the water depth.
 
An initial wave phase ''θ&nbsp;=&nbsp;θ<sub>0</sub>'' propagates as a function of space and time. Its subsequent position is given by:
 
:<math>x = \frac{\lambda}{T}\, t + \frac{\lambda}{2\pi}\, \theta_0 = \frac{\omega}{k}\, t + \frac{\theta_0}{k}.</math>
 
This shows that the phase moves with the velocity:<ref name=Lamb366/>
 
:<math>c_p = \frac{\lambda}{T} = \frac{\omega}{k} = \frac{\Omega(k)}{k},</math>
 
which is called the phase velocity.
 
===Phase velocity===
{{See|Phase velocity}}
{| style="float:right;"  cellspacing="0"
|-
|[[File:Dispersion gravity 1.svg|thumb|right|Dispersion of gravity waves on a fluid surface. Phase and group velocity divided by shallow-water phase velocity ''&radic;(gh)'' as a function of relative depth ''h&nbsp;/&nbsp;&lambda;''.<br>Blue lines (A): phase velocity; Red lines (B): group velocity; Black dashed line (C): phase and group velocity ''&radic;(gh)'' valid in shallow water.<br>Drawn lines: dispersion relation valid in arbitrary depth.<br>Dashed lines (blue and red): deep water limits.]]
|[[File:Dispersion gravity 2.svg|thumb|right|Dispersion of gravity waves on a fluid surface. Phase and group velocity divided by deep-water phase velocity ''&radic;(½&nbsp;g&lambda;&nbsp;/&nbsp;&pi;)'' as a function of relative depth ''h&nbsp;/&nbsp;&lambda;''.<br>Blue lines (A): phase velocity; Red lines (B): group velocity; Black dashed line (C): phase and group velocity ''&radic;(gh)'' valid in shallow water.<br>Drawn lines: dispersion relation valid in arbitrary depth.<br>Dashed lines (blue and red): deep water limits.]]
|}
 
A [[sinusoidal]] wave, of small surface-elevation [[amplitude]] and with a constant [[wavelength]], propagates with the [[phase velocity]], also called celerity or phase speed. While the phase velocity is a vector and has an associated direction, celerity or phase speed refer only to the magnitude of the phase velocity. According to linear theory for waves forced by gravity, the phase speed depends on the wavelength and the water depth. For a fixed water depth, long waves (with large wavelength) propagate faster than shorter waves.
 
In the left figure, it can be seen that [[shallow water equations|shallow water]] waves, with wavelengths ''λ'' much larger than the water depth ''h'', travel with the phase velocity<ref name=Lamb366/>
 
:<math>c_p = \sqrt{gh} \qquad \scriptstyle \text{(shallow water),}\,</math>
 
with ''g'' the [[standard gravity|acceleration by gravity]] and ''c<sub>p</sub>'' the phase speed. Since this shallow-water phase speed is independent of the wavelength, shallow water waves do not have frequency dispersion.
 
Using another normalization for the same frequency dispersion relation, the figure on the right shows that in deep water, with water depth ''h'' larger than half the wavelength ''λ'' (so for ''h/λ&nbsp;>&nbsp;0.5''), the phase velocity ''c<sub>p</sub>'' is independent of the water depth:<ref name=Lamb366/>
 
:<math>c_p = \sqrt{\frac{g\lambda}{2\pi}} = \frac{g}{2\pi} T \qquad \scriptstyle \text{(deep water),}</math>
 
with ''T'' the wave [[Periodic function|period]] (the [[Multiplicative inverse|reciprocal]] of the [[frequency]] ''f'', ''T=1/f'' ). So in deep water the phase speed increases with the wavelength, and with the period.
 
Since the phase speed satisfies ''c<sub>p</sub>&nbsp;=&nbsp;λ/T&nbsp;=&nbsp;λf'', wavelength and period (or frequency) are related. For instance in deep water:
 
:<math>\lambda = \frac{g}{2\pi}T^2 \qquad \scriptstyle \text{(deep water).}</math>
 
The dispersion characteristics for intermediate depth are given below.
 
===Group velocity===
{{See|Group velocity}}
[[File:Wave group.gif|thumb|388px|Frequency dispersion in [[monochrome|bichromatic]] groups of [[ocean surface wave|gravity waves]] on the surface of deep water. The red dot moves with the [[phase velocity]], and the green dots propagate with the group velocity.
{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width:98%;"
|-
! More …
|-
|In this deep-water case, the phase velocity is twice the group velocity. The red dot overtakes two green dots, when moving from the left to the right of the figure.<br>New waves seem to emerge at the back of a wave group, grow in amplitude until they are at the center of the group, and vanish at the wave group front.<br>For gravity surface-waves, the water particle velocities are much smaller than the phase velocity, in most cases.
|}]]
 
[[Interference (wave propagation)|Interference]] of two sinusoidal waves with slightly different wavelengths, but the same [[amplitude]] and propagation direction, results in a [[beat (acoustics)|beat pattern]], called a wave group. As can be seen in the animation, the group moves with a group velocity ''c<sub>g</sub>'' different from the phase velocity ''c<sub>p</sub>'', due to frequency dispersion.
 
The group velocity is depicted by the red lines (marked ''B'') in the two figures above.
In shallow water, the group velocity is equal to the shallow-water phase velocity. This is because shallow water waves are not dispersive. In deep water, the group velocity is equal to half the phase velocity: ''c<sub>g</sub>&nbsp;=&nbsp;½&nbsp;c<sub>p</sub>''.<ref name=Phil25>See Phillips (1977), p. 25.</ref>
 
The group velocity also turns out to be the energy transport velocity. This is the velocity with which the mean wave energy is transported horizontally in a [[narrowband|narrow-band]] wave field.<ref>{{Citation | last=Reynolds |first=O. | authorlink=Osborne Reynolds | year=1877 |title=On the rate of progression of groups of waves and the rate at which energy is transmitted by waves | journal=Nature | volume=16 | pages=343–44 | doi=10.1038/016341c0|bibcode = 1877Natur..16R.341. }}<br>{{Citation | title=On progressive waves | author=Lord Rayleigh (J. W. Strutt) | authorlink=Lord Rayleigh | year=1877 | journal=Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society | volume=9 | pages=21–26 | doi=10.1112/plms/s1-9.1.21 }} Reprinted as Appendix in: ''Theory of Sound'' '''1''', MacMillan, 2nd revised edition, 1894.</ref><ref name=Lamb382>See Lamb (1994), §237, pp. 382–384.</ref>
 
In the case of a group velocity different from the phase velocity, a consequence is that the number of waves counted in a wave group is different when counted from a snapshot in space at a certain moment, from when counted in time from the measured surface elevation at a fixed position. Consider a wave group of length ''Λ<sub>g</sub>'' and group duration of ''τ<sub>g</sub>''. The group velocity is:<ref name=Ding46>See Dingemans (1997), section 2.1.2, pp. 46–50.</ref>
 
:<math>c_g = \frac{\Lambda_g}{\tau_g}.</math>
 
[[File:Wave group space time.svg|thumb|388px|The number of waves per group as observed in space at a certain moment (upper blue line), is different from the number of waves per group seen in time at a fixed position (lower orange line), due to frequency dispersion.
{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width:98%;"
|-
! More …
|-
|For the shown case, a bichromatic group of gravity waves on the surface of deep water, the group velocity is half the phase velocity. In this example, there are 5.75 waves between two wave group nodes in space, while there are 11.5 waves between two wave group nodes in time.
|}]]
[[File:Wea00816.jpg|thumb|right|388px|[[North Pacific]] storm waves as seen from the [[NOAA]] [[Ship prefix|M/V]] Noble Star, Winter 1989.]]
The number of waves in a wave group, measured in space at a certain moment is: ''Λ<sub>g</sub>&nbsp;/&nbsp;λ''. While measured at a fixed location in time, the number of waves in a group is: ''τ<sub>g</sub>&nbsp;/&nbsp;T''. So the ratio of the number of waves measured in space to those measured in time is:
 
:<math>
  \tfrac{\text{No. of waves in space}}{\text{No. of waves in time}} =
  \frac{\Lambda_g / \lambda}{\tau_g / T} =
  \frac{\Lambda_g}{\tau_g} \cdot \frac{T}{\lambda} =
  \frac{c_g}{c_p}.
</math>
 
So in deep water, with ''c<sub>g</sub> = ½ c<sub>p</sub>'',<ref name=Lamb380>See Lamb (1994), §236, pp. 380–382.</ref> a wave group has twice as many waves in time as it has in space.
 
The water surface elevation ''η(x,t)'', as a function of horizontal position ''x'' and time ''t'', for a [[monochromatic|bichromatic]] wave group of full [[modulation]] can be [[mathematics|mathematically]] formulated as:<ref name=Lamb380/>
 
:<math>
\eta = a\, \sin \left( k_1 x - \omega_1 t \right)
    + a\, \sin \left( k_2 x - \omega_2 t \right),
</math>
with:
* ''a'' the wave [[amplitude]] of each frequency component in metres,
* ''k<sub>1</sub>'' and ''k<sub>2</sub>'' the [[wave number]] of each wave component, in radians per metre, and
* ''ω<sub>1</sub>'' and ''ω<sub>2</sub>'' the [[angular frequency]] of each wave component, in radians per second.
 
Both ''ω<sub>1</sub>'' and ''k<sub>1</sub>'', as well as ''ω<sub>2</sub>'' and ''k<sub>2</sub>'', have to satisfy the dispersion relation:
 
:<math>\omega_1^2 = \Omega^2(k_1)\,</math> &nbsp; and &nbsp; <math>\omega_2^2 = \Omega^2(k_2).\,</math>
 
Using [[List of trigonometric identities|trigonometric identities]], the surface elevation is written as:<ref name=Ding46/>
 
:<math>
\eta= \left[ 2\, a\, \cos \left( \frac{k_1 - k_2}{2} x - \frac{\omega_1 - \omega_2}{2} t \right) \right]\;
              \cdot\;
              \sin \left( \frac{k_1 + k_2}{2} x - \frac{\omega_1 + \omega_2}{2} t \right).
</math>
 
The part between square brackets is the slowly varying amplitude of the group, with group wave number ''½&nbsp;(&nbsp;k<sub>1</sub>&nbsp;-&nbsp;k<sub>2</sub>&nbsp;)'' and group angular frequency ''½&nbsp;(&nbsp;ω<sub>1</sub>&nbsp;-&nbsp;ω<sub>2</sub>&nbsp;)''. As a result, the group velocity is, for the limit ''k<sub>1</sub>&nbsp;→&nbsp;k<sub>2</sub>''&nbsp;:<ref name=Ding46/><ref name=Lamb380/>
 
:<math>c_g = \lim_{k_1\, \to\, k_2} \frac{\omega_1 - \omega_2}{k_1 - k_2}
          = \lim_{k_1\, \to\, k_2} \frac{\Omega(k_1) - \Omega(k_2)}{k_1 - k_2}
          = \frac{\text{d}\Omega(k)}{\text{d}k}.</math>
 
Wave groups can only be discerned in case of a narrow-banded signal, with the wave-number difference ''k<sub>1</sub>&nbsp;-&nbsp;k<sub>2</sub>'' small compared to the mean wave number ''½&nbsp;(k<sub>1</sub>&nbsp;+&nbsp;k<sub>2</sub>)''.
 
===Multi-component wave patterns===
[[File:Wave disp.gif|frame|Frequency dispersion of [[ocean surface wave|surface gravity waves]] on deep water. The [[superposition principle|superposition]] (dark blue line) of three sinusoidal wave components (light blue lines) is shown.
{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width:98%;"
|-
! More …
|-
|For the three components respectively 22 (bottom), 25 (middle) and 29 (top) [[wavelength]]s fit in a horizontal domain of 2,000 meter length. The component with the shortest wavelength (top) propagates slowest. The wave [[amplitude]]s of the components are respectively 1, 2 and 1 meter. The differences in wavelength and [[phase speed]] of the components results in a changing pattern of [[group velocity|wave groups]], due to amplification where the components are in phase, and reduction where they are in anti-phase.
|}]]
The effect of frequency dispersion is that the waves travel as a function of wavelength, so that spatial and temporal phase properties of the propagating wave are constantly changing. For example, under the action of gravity, water waves with a longer [[wavelength]] travel faster than those with a shorter wavelength.
 
While two superimposed sinusoidal waves, called a bichromatic wave, have an [[group velocity|envelope]] which travels unchanged, three or more sinusoidal wave components result in a changing pattern of the waves and their envelope. A [[sea state]] – that is: real waves on the sea or ocean – can be described as a superposition of many sinusoidal waves with different wavelengths, amplitudes, initial phases and propagation directions. Each of these components travels with its own phase velocity, in accordance with the dispersion relation. The [[statistics]] of such a surface can be described by its [[power spectrum]].<ref name=Phil102>See Phillips (1977), p. 102.</ref>
 
===Dispersion relation===
In the table below, the dispersion relation ''ω<sup>2</sup>'' = [''Ω(k)'']<sup>2</sup> between angular frequency ''ω = 2π / T'' and wave number ''k = 2π / λ'' is given, as well as the phase and group speeds.<ref name=Ding46/>
 
{| class="wikitable  collapsible collapsed"  style="width:75%; text-align:center;"
|-
! colspan="6" | Frequency dispersion of gravity waves on the surface of deep water, shallow water and at intermediate depth, according to linear wave theory
|-
! style="width:10%;"| quantity
! style="width:5%;"| symbol
! style="width:5%;"| units
! style="width:10%;"| deep water<br>( ''h'' > ½ ''λ'' )
! style="width:10%;"| shallow water<br>( ''h'' < 0.05 ''λ'' )
! style="width:10%;"| intermediate depth<br>( all ''λ'' and ''h'' )
|- style="height:120px"
! dispersion relation
| <math>\displaystyle\Omega(k)</math>
|| [[radian|rad]] / s
|| <math>\sqrt{gk}=\sqrt{\frac{2\pi\,g}{\lambda}}</math>
|| <math>k \sqrt{g h} = \frac{2\pi}{\lambda} \sqrt{g h}</math>
|| <math>
  \begin{align}
    &\sqrt{ gk\, \tanh\left( kh \right)}\,
    \\[1.2ex]
    &=\sqrt{\frac{2\pi g}{\lambda}\tanh\left(\frac{2\pi h}{\lambda}\right)}\,
  \end{align}
  </math>
|- style="height:120px"
! [[phase velocity]]
| <math>\displaystyle c_p=\frac{\lambda}{T}=\frac{\omega}{k}</math>
|| m / s
|| <math>\sqrt{\frac{g}{k}} = \frac{g}{\omega} = \frac{g}{2\pi} T</math>
|| <math>\sqrt{g h}</math>
|| <math>\sqrt{\frac{g}{k}\tanh\left( k h \right)}</math>
|- style="height:120px"
! [[group velocity]]
| <math>\displaystyle c_g= \frac{\partial\Omega}{\partial k}</math>
|| m / s
|| <math>\frac{1}{2}\sqrt{\frac{g}{k}} = \frac{1}{2}\frac{g}{\omega} = \frac{g}{4\pi} T</math>
|| <math>\sqrt{g h}</math>
|| <math>\frac{1}{2} c_p \left( 1 + \frac{2 k h}{\sinh\left(2 k h \right)} \right)</math>
|- style="height:120px"
! ratio
| <math> \displaystyle \frac{c_g}{c_p}</math>
|| -
|| <math>\displaystyle\frac{1}{2}</math>
|| <math>\displaystyle 1</math>
|| <math>\frac{1}{2} \left( 1 + \frac{2 k h}{\sinh\left( 2 k h \right)} \right)</math>
|- style="height:120px"
! wavelength
| <math>\displaystyle\lambda</math>
|| m
|| <math>\frac{g}{2\pi} T^2</math>
|| <math>T \sqrt{g h}</math>
|| for given period ''T'', the solution of:<br>&nbsp;<br><math>\displaystyle
  \left(\frac{2\pi}{T}\right)^2=\frac{2\pi g}{\lambda}\tanh\left(\frac{2\pi h}{\lambda}\right)</math>
|}
 
Deep water corresponds with water depths larger than half the [[wavelength]], which is the common situation in the ocean. In deep water, longer period waves  propagate faster and transport their energy faster. The deep-water group velocity is half the [[phase velocity]]. In [[waves and shallow water|shallow water]], for wavelengths larger than twenty times the water depth,<ref>See Dean and Dalrymple (1991), page 65.</ref> as found quite often near the coast, the group velocity is equal to the phase velocity.
 
==History==
The full linear dispersion relation was first found by [[Pierre-Simon Laplace]], although there were some errors in his solution for the linear wave problem.
The complete theory for linear water waves, including dispersion, was derived by [[George Biddell Airy]] and published in about 1840. A similar equation was also found by [[Philip Kelland]] at around the same time (but making some mistakes in his derivation of the wave theory).<ref>See Craik (2004).</ref>
 
The shallow water (with small ''h / λ'') limit, ''ω<sup>2</sup> = gh k<sup>2</sup>'', was derived by [[Joseph Louis Lagrange]].
 
==Surface tension effects==
{{See|Capillary wave}}
[[File:Dispersion capillary.svg|thumb|right|Dispersion of gravity-capillary waves on the surface of deep water. Phase and group velocity divided by <math>\scriptstyle \sqrt[4]{g\sigma/\rho}</math> as a function of inverse relative wavelength <math>\scriptstyle \frac{1}{\lambda}\sqrt{\sigma/(\rho g)}</math>.<br>Blue lines (A): phase velocity, Red lines (B): group velocity.<br>Drawn lines: dispersion relation for gravity-capillary waves.<br>Dashed lines: dispersion relation for deep-water gravity waves.<br>Dash-dot lines: dispersion relation valid for deep-water capillary waves.]]
In case of gravity–capillary waves, where [[surface tension]] affects the waves, the dispersion relation becomes:<ref name=Phil37/>
:<math>
  \omega^2 = \left( g k + \frac{\sigma}{\rho} k^3 \right) \tanh (kh),
</math>
with ''σ'' the surface tension (in N/m).
 
For a water–air interface (with {{nowrap|''σ'' {{=}} 0.074 N/m}} and {{nowrap|''ρ'' {{=}} 1000 kg/m³}}) the waves can be approximated as pure capillary waves – dominated by surface-tension effects – for [[wavelength]]s less than {{convert|0.4|cm|in|1|abbr=on}}. For wavelengths above {{convert|7|cm|in|0|abbr=on}} the waves are to good approximation pure [[surface gravity wave]]s with very little surface-tension effects.<ref>See Lighthill (1978), pp. 224–225.</ref>
 
==Nonlinear effects==
===Shallow water===
Amplitude dispersion effects appear for instance in the [[wave of translation|solitary wave]]: a single hump of water traveling with constant velocity in shallow water with a horizontal bed. Note that solitary waves are near-[[soliton]]s, but not exactly – after the interaction of two (colliding or overtaking) solitary waves, they have changed a bit in [[amplitude]] and an oscillatory residual is left behind.<ref>See e.g.: {{Citation | doi = 10.1063/1.2205916 | volume = 18 | issue = 057106 | pages = 25&nbsp;pp. | nopp = yes | last1 = Craig | first1 = W. | first2 = P. | last2 = Guyenne |first3 = J. | last3 = Hammack | first4= D. | last4 = Henderson |first5 = C. | last5 = Sulem | title = Solitary water wave interactions | journal = Physics of Fluids | year = 2006 |bibcode = 2006PhFl...18e7106C }}</ref> The single soliton solution of the [[Korteweg–de Vries equation]], of wave height ''H'' in water depth ''h'' far away from the wave crest, travels with the velocity:
 
:<math>c_p = c_g = \sqrt{g(h+H)}.</math>
 
So for this nonlinear gravity wave it is the total water depth under the wave crest that determines the speed, with higher waves traveling faster than lower waves. Note that solitary wave solutions only exist for positive values of ''H'', solitary gravity waves of depression do not exist.
 
===Deep water===
The linear dispersion relation – unaffected by wave amplitude – is for nonlinear waves also correct at the second order of the [[perturbation theory]] expansion, with the orders in terms of the wave steepness ''k A'' (where ''A'' is wave [[amplitude]]). To the third order, and for deep water, the dispersion relation is<ref name=Lamb417>See Lamb (1994), §250, pp. 417–420.</ref>
 
:<math> \omega^2 = gk \left[1+(kA)^2\right]. </math>
 
This implies that large waves travel faster than small ones of the same frequency. This is only noticeable when the wave steepness ''k A'' is large.
 
==Waves on a mean current: Doppler shift==
Water waves on a mean flow (so a wave in a moving medium) experience a [[Doppler shift]]. Suppose the dispersion relation for a non-moving medium is:
 
:<math>\omega^2 = \Omega^2(k),\,</math>
 
with ''k'' the wavenumber. Then for a medium with mean [[velocity]] [[vector (geometric)|vector]] '''V''', the dispersion relationship with Doppler shift becomes:<ref name=Phil24>See Phillips (1977), p. 24.</ref>
 
:<math>\left( \omega - \bold k \cdot \bold V \right)^2 = \Omega^2(k),</math>
 
where '''k''' is the wavenumber vector, related to ''k'' as: ''k'' = |'''k'''|. The [[inner product]] '''k'''•'''V''' is equal to: '''k'''•'''V''''' = kV ''cos ''α'', with ''V'' the length of the mean velocity vector '''V''': ''V'' = |'''V'''|. And ''α'' the angle between the wave propagation direction and the mean flow direction. For waves and current in the same direction, '''k'''•'''V'''=''kV''.
 
==See also==
===Other articles on dispersion===
*[[Dispersive partial differential equation]]
*[[Capillary wave]]
 
===Dispersive water-wave models===
 
*[[Airy wave theory]]
*[[Benjamin–Bona–Mahony equation]]
*[[Boussinesq approximation (water waves)]]
*[[Camassa–Holm equation]]
*[[Davey–Stewartson equation]]
*[[Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation]] (also known as KP equation)
*[[Korteweg–de Vries equation]] (also known as KdV equation)
*[[Luke's variational principle]]
*[[Nonlinear Schrödinger equation]]
*[[Shallow water equations]]
*[[Stokes' wave theory]]
*[[Whitham equation]]
 
==Notes==
{{Reflist|2}}
 
==References==
{{refbegin}}
*{{citation | first=A.D.D. | last=Craik | year=2004 | title=The origins of water wave theory | journal=Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics | volume=36 | pages=1–28 | doi=10.1146/annurev.fluid.36.050802.122118 |bibcode = 2004AnRFM..36....1C }}
*{{citation | title=Water wave mechanics for engineers and scientists | first1=R.G. | last1=Dean | first2=R.A. | last2=Dalrymple | year=1991 | series=Advanced Series on Ocean Engineering | volume=2 | publisher=World Scientific, Singapore | isbn=978-981-02-0420-4 | oclc=22907242 }}
*{{citation | title=Water wave propagation over uneven bottoms | first=M.W. | last=Dingemans | year=1997 | series=Advanced Series on Ocean Engineering | volume=13 | publisher=World Scientific, Singapore | isbn=981-02-0427-2 | oclc=36126836 }}, 2 Parts, 967 pages.
*{{citation | first=H. | last=Lamb | authorlink=Horace Lamb | year=1994 | title=Hydrodynamics | publisher=Cambridge University Press | edition=6th | isbn=978-0-521-45868-9 | oclc=30070401 }} Originally published in 1879, the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932.
*{{citation | author1-link=Lev Landau | last1=Landau | first1=L.D. | author2-link=Evgeny Lifshitz | last2=Lifshitz | first2=E.M. | year=1987 | title=Fluid Mechanics | publisher=Pergamon Press | edition=2nd | isbn=0-08-033932-8 | series=Course of theoretical physics | volume=6 }}
*{{citation | title=Waves in fluids | first=M.J. | last=Lighthill | year=1978 | publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn=0-521-29233-6 | pages=504 pp. |nopp=yes | authorlink=James Lighthill | oclc=2966533}}
*{{citation | first=O.M. | last=Phillips | title=The dynamics of the upper ocean |publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=1977 | edition=2nd | isbn=0-521-29801-6 | oclc=7319931 }}
*{{citation | first=G. B. | last=Whitham | authorlink = Gerald B. Whitham | title=Linear and nonlinear waves | publisher = Wiley-Interscience | year=1974 | isbn=0-471-94090-9 | oclc=815118 }}
{{refend}}
 
==External links==
*Mathematical aspects of dispersive waves are discussed on the [http://tosio.math.toronto.edu/wiki/index.php/Main_Page  Dispersive Wiki].
 
{{physical oceanography}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dispersion (Water Waves)}}
[[Category:Water waves]]
[[Category:Wave mechanics]]
[[Category:Fluid dynamics]]
[[Category:Physical oceanography]]

Latest revision as of 01:00, 9 January 2015

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