Surface waves propagating on a turbulent flow
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Abstract
We study the propagation of monochromatic surface waves on a turbulent flow of liquid metal, when
the waves are much less energetic than the background flow. Electromagnetic forcing drives quasitwo-
dimensional turbulence with strong vertical vorticity. To isolate the surface-wave field, we
remove the surface deformation induced by the background turbulent flow using coherent-phase
averaging at the wave frequency. We observe a significant increase in wavelength, when the latter
is smaller than the forcing length scale. This phenomenon has not been reported before and can be
explained by multiple random wave deflections induced by the turbulent velocity gradients. The shift
in wavelength thus provides an estimate of the fluctuations in deflection angle. Local measurements
of the wave frequency far from the wavemaker do not reveal such systematic behavior, although a
small shift is visible. Finally, we quantify the damping enhancement induced by the turbulent flow
and compare it to the existing theoretical predictions. Most of them suggest that the damping
increases as the square of the Froude number, whereas our experimental data show a linear
increase with the Froude number. We interpret this linear relationship as a balance between the
time for a wave to cross a turbulent structure and the turbulent mixing time. The larger the ratio of
these two times, the more energy is extracted from the wave. We conclude with possible
mechanisms for energy exchange.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI Sin acceso a texto completo
Patrocinador
CONICYT/FONDECYT postdoctorado 3140550
Quote Item
Physics of Fluids Volumen: 28 Número: 2 (2016)
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