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Recurrent solutions of the Alber equation initialized by Joint North Sea Wave Project spectra

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posted on 2024-07-09, 16:04 authored by A. Ribal, Alexander Babanin, I. Young, Alessandro Toffoli, M. Stiassnie
Linear instability of two-dimensional wave fields and its concurrent evolution in time is here investigated by means of the Alber equation for narrow-banded random surface waves in deep water subject to inhomogeneous disturbances. The probability of freak waves in the context of these simulations is also discussed. The instability is first studied for the symmetric Lorentz spectrum, and continued for the realistic asymmetric Joint North Sea Wave Project (JONSWAP) spectrum of ocean waves with variable directional spreading and steepness. It is found that instability depends on the directional spreading and parameters alpha and gamma of the JONSWAP spectrum, where alpha and gamma are the energy scale and the peak enhancement factor, respectively. Both influence the mean steepness of waves with such a spectrum, although in different ways. Specifically, if the instability stops as a result of the directional spreading, increase of the steepness by increasing alpha or gamma can reactivate it. A criterion for the instability is suggested as a dimensionless 'width parameter', Pi. For the unstable conditions, long-time evolution is simulated by integrating the Alber equation numerically. Recurrent evolution is obtained, which is a stochastic counterpart of the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam recurrence obtained for the cubic Schrodinger equation. This recurrence enables us to study the probability of freak waves, and the results are compared to the values given by the Rayleigh distribution. Moreover, it is found that stability-instability transition, the most unstable mode, recurrence duration and freak wave probability depend solely on the dimensionless 'width parameter', Pi.

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ISSN

0022-1120

Journal title

Journal of Fluid Mechanics

Volume

719

Pagination

30 pp

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2013 Cambridge University Press. The published version is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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