Kelvin wakes 刺骨的言语ヽ痛彻心扉 2022-07-13 01:27 78阅读 0赞 https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/KWake.html ht Watching ducks on a pond one may wonder how these beautiful wake patterns arise. William Thomson (the famous physicist Lord Kelvin) found already in 1887 the remarkable fact that the angle at which the wake fans out is always the same, regardless whether the wake is caused by a duck, a boat, or a ship, as long as the water is deep as compared with the lengths of the generated waves [\[1\]][1]. ![Kelvin wake][] ![Kelvin wake][Kelvin wake 1] <table style="font-family:Simsun"> <tbody> <tr> <td align="center">Wakes of ducks on a pond</td> <td align="center">Wakes of two boats on Avon Gorge.<br> Photo: Arpingstone, <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wake.avon.gorge.2boats.arp.750pix.jpg" style="text-decoration:none; color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow">source</a></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> While the mathematical treatment of water waves is difficult, see the Wikipedia [article][], some results are easy to obtain, and in particular the shape of the wake can be explained using only elementary maths [\[2\]][1]. Whereas sound waves propagate with the same velocity irrespective of their length, with the well known effect of shock waves when flying objects exceed sound velocity, in deep water the velocity of the waves depends on the wavelength. The longer the waves, the faster they propagate. This can be found from a simple dimensional analysis. What are the quantities on which the velocity of the waves may depend? Clearly the wavelength λ, the depth of the water H, the earths gravitation g, the density of the water ρ, the surface tension σ, or what else? The surface tension affects only very short waves, here we may ignore it. If the water is deep, so to say infinitely deep, the depth cannot occur in an expression for the wave velocity. If we have an equation like v = something, then this “something” must have the dimension of a velocity, i.e. length divided by time. The square root of wavelength times gravitational acceleration has this dimension, thus we conclude that the velocity is proportional to this root: v ∝ √ gλ . (The exact expression for the phase velocity is vφ = √gλ ⁄ (2π) .) The phase velocity is, roughly speaking, the velocity of the individual wave crests. A wave train of finite length, however, moves with the group velocity which in this case is only half the phase velocity, vg = vφ/2. (This follows from the above equation and the general expression for the group velocity, see e.g. this Wikipedia [article][article 1].) If we look at a group of waves, following a particular crest, we see that it moves forward faster than the whole bunch, gets weaker as it approaches its front, and vanishes. But from behind, a new crest comes up, gets stronger, and weaker again as it approaches the leading edge … The phase velocity of gravity waves depends on the wavelength and the group velocity is half the phase velocity, that is all what is necessary to understand the gross features of the wakes. <table style="font-family:Simsun"> <tbody> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake1.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td> <p>Let us first consider the fictitious case where groups and phases travel with the same speed, which we assume to be 80 % of that of the boat. This is sketched to the left. The boat continuously produces waves. We invoke Huygens' principle to find the resulting shock wave. The circles are the elementary waves emitted at the points marked by dots along the boat's trajectory. At the envelope of all the circles the wavelets have all the same phase and interfere constructively which yields the resulting wave front, whereas at all other places the wavelets almost cancel each other.</p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake2a.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td> <p>Next we assume that the boat excites real water waves. We consider a single frequency out of the whole spectrum. Instead of forming a shock wave, the wavelets produced earlier have only travelled half the way and thus the angle which the wake encloses with the path line of the boat is smaller and can easily be found graphically.</p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake3.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td>The boat excites waves of all possible wavelengths and corresponding phase and group velocities, and in the left figure the construction of the wake angles for phase velocities of 10, 20, 30 … 99.99 percent of the boat's speed is shown. The red dots mark the points where the waves emitted at point A have arrived when the boat is at point B. From the construction it is clear that the red dots are lying on a circle with radius one quarter of the distance AB. Note that the waves with phase velocity equal to the boat's speed follow the boat along its path with wake angle of 0°.</td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake4.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td>We can easily determine the maximum angle θ of possible wakes. The direction of the wake is given by the tangent to the red circle drawn from point B. Along this line the crests of the waves are highest, the troughs deepest, as all the wavelets in the neighbourhood of wavelengths interfere constructively. From the sketch it is seen that sin(θ) = 1/3, and thus θ = 19.47°. This has been found by William Thomson, and it is true as long as the group velocity is half the phase velocity.</td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/bilder/DSC02547mk.jpg" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td>The waves with phase velocity equal or close to the boat's (or duck's) speed follow the boat (or duck) along its path with zero or small wake angle and form the trail of transverse waves. The whole pattern seems to be rigidly fixed to the boat if that moves straightforward with constant speed.</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Strongly powered fast boats apparently arouse narrower wakes. This has been discussed recently by Rabaud and Moisy [\[3\],][1] see also [\[4\], \[5\]][1] and is due to the fact that waves longer than the boat's hull are excited the less the longer they are. \[1\] William Thomson (1887): "On ship waves", Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Proceedings, 38:409–434 pp. 641–649. \[2\] Frank S. Crawford: Elementary derivation of the wake pattern of a boat. Am. J. Phys. 52, 782 (1984); [(abstract).][abstract_.] \[3\] Marc Rabaud and Frédéric Moisy: Ship wakes: Kelvin or Mach angle? [arXiv.org > physics > arXiv:1304.2653][arXiv.org _ physics _ arXiv_1304.2653] or [PRL 110, 214503 (2013)][PRL 110_ 214503 _2013] \[4\] Lord Kelvin Wipes Out on Speed Boat Wakes? By Adrian Cho, May 9, 2013 [link][] \[5\] Reawakening the Kelvin wake. By Hamish Johnston [link][link 1] tps://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/KWake.html Watching ducks on a pond one may wonder how these beautiful wake patterns arise. William Thomson (the famous physicist Lord Kelvin) found already in 1887 the remarkable fact that the angle at which the wake fans out is always the same, regardless whether the wake is caused by a duck, a boat, or a ship, as long as the water is deep as compared with the lengths of the generated waves [\[1\]][1]. ![Kelvin wake][] ![Kelvin wake][Kelvin wake 1] <table style="font-family:Simsun"> <tbody> <tr> <td align="center">Wakes of ducks on a pond</td> <td align="center">Wakes of two boats on Avon Gorge.<br> Photo: Arpingstone, <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wake.avon.gorge.2boats.arp.750pix.jpg" style="text-decoration:none; color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow">source</a></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> While the mathematical treatment of water waves is difficult, see the Wikipedia [article][], some results are easy to obtain, and in particular the shape of the wake can be explained using only elementary maths [\[2\]][1]. Whereas sound waves propagate with the same velocity irrespective of their length, with the well known effect of shock waves when flying objects exceed sound velocity, in deep water the velocity of the waves depends on the wavelength. The longer the waves, the faster they propagate. This can be found from a simple dimensional analysis. What are the quantities on which the velocity of the waves may depend? Clearly the wavelength λ, the depth of the water H, the earths gravitation g, the density of the water ρ, the surface tension σ, or what else? The surface tension affects only very short waves, here we may ignore it. If the water is deep, so to say infinitely deep, the depth cannot occur in an expression for the wave velocity. If we have an equation like v = something, then this “something” must have the dimension of a velocity, i.e. length divided by time. The square root of wavelength times gravitational acceleration has this dimension, thus we conclude that the velocity is proportional to this root: v ∝ √ gλ . (The exact expression for the phase velocity is vφ = √gλ ⁄ (2π) .) The phase velocity is, roughly speaking, the velocity of the individual wave crests. A wave train of finite length, however, moves with the group velocity which in this case is only half the phase velocity, vg = vφ/2. (This follows from the above equation and the general expression for the group velocity, see e.g. this Wikipedia [article][article 1].) If we look at a group of waves, following a particular crest, we see that it moves forward faster than the whole bunch, gets weaker as it approaches its front, and vanishes. But from behind, a new crest comes up, gets stronger, and weaker again as it approaches the leading edge … The phase velocity of gravity waves depends on the wavelength and the group velocity is half the phase velocity, that is all what is necessary to understand the gross features of the wakes. <table style="font-family:Simsun"> <tbody> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake1.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td> <p>Let us first consider the fictitious case where groups and phases travel with the same speed, which we assume to be 80 % of that of the boat. This is sketched to the left. The boat continuously produces waves. We invoke Huygens' principle to find the resulting shock wave. The circles are the elementary waves emitted at the points marked by dots along the boat's trajectory. At the envelope of all the circles the wavelets have all the same phase and interfere constructively which yields the resulting wave front, whereas at all other places the wavelets almost cancel each other.</p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake2a.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td> <p>Next we assume that the boat excites real water waves. We consider a single frequency out of the whole spectrum. Instead of forming a shock wave, the wavelets produced earlier have only travelled half the way and thus the angle which the wake encloses with the path line of the boat is smaller and can easily be found graphically.</p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake3.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td>The boat excites waves of all possible wavelengths and corresponding phase and group velocities, and in the left figure the construction of the wake angles for phase velocities of 10, 20, 30 … 99.99 percent of the boat's speed is shown. The red dots mark the points where the waves emitted at point A have arrived when the boat is at point B. From the construction it is clear that the red dots are lying on a circle with radius one quarter of the distance AB. Note that the waves with phase velocity equal to the boat's speed follow the boat along its path with wake angle of 0°.</td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/figuren/wake4.png" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td>We can easily determine the maximum angle θ of possible wakes. The direction of the wake is given by the tangent to the red circle drawn from point B. Along this line the crests of the waves are highest, the troughs deepest, as all the wavelets in the neighbourhood of wavelengths interfere constructively. From the sketch it is seen that sin(θ) = 1/3, and thus θ = 19.47°. This has been found by William Thomson, and it is true as long as the group velocity is half the phase velocity.</td> </tr> <tr> <td><a style="color:rgb(255,192,255)" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/bilder/DSC02547mk.jpg" alt="Kelvin wake" width="300"></a></td> <td>The waves with phase velocity equal or close to the boat's (or duck's) speed follow the boat (or duck) along its path with zero or small wake angle and form the trail of transverse waves. The whole pattern seems to be rigidly fixed to the boat if that moves straightforward with constant speed.</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Strongly powered fast boats apparently arouse narrower wakes. This has been discussed recently by Rabaud and Moisy [\[3\],][1] see also [\[4\], \[5\]][1] and is due to the fact that waves longer than the boat's hull are excited the less the longer they are. \[1\] William Thomson (1887): "On ship waves", Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Proceedings, 38:409–434 pp. 641–649. \[2\] Frank S. Crawford: Elementary derivation of the wake pattern of a boat. Am. J. Phys. 52, 782 (1984); [(abstract).][abstract_.] \[3\] Marc Rabaud and Frédéric Moisy: Ship wakes: Kelvin or Mach angle? [arXiv.org > physics > arXiv:1304.2653][arXiv.org _ physics _ arXiv_1304.2653] or [PRL 110, 214503 (2013)][PRL 110_ 214503 _2013] \[4\] Lord Kelvin Wipes Out on Speed Boat Wakes? By Adrian Cho, May 9, 2013 [link][] \[5\] Reawakening the Kelvin wake. By Hamish Johnston [link][link 1] [1]: https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/KWake.html#kelvinwakes [Kelvin wake]: /images/20220713/5c345c2f6bdb47c4bcc2ba811ef09d12.png [Kelvin wake 1]: https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/bilder/Wake.avon.gorge.2boats.arp.750pix.jpg [article]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stokes_wave [article 1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_velocity [abstract_.]: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aapt/journal/ajp/52/9/10.1119/1.13550 [arXiv.org _ physics _ arXiv_1304.2653]: http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.2653 [PRL 110_ 214503 _2013]: https://www.irphe.fr/~duchemin/Journal_Club/Rabaud20132.pdf [link]: http://news.sciencemag.org/2013/05/lord-kelvin-wipes-out-speed-boat-wakes [link 1]: http://blog.physicsworld.com/2013/10/02/reawakening-the-kelvin-wake/
相关 Centos-Wake On Lan远程唤醒服务器 文章目录 1. 环境要求 2. 查看是否属于同一局域网 3. 查看目的主机是否开启了网络唤醒 4. 源主机安装wol 拼搏现实的明天。/ 2023年06月16日 03:59/ 0 赞/ 5 阅读
相关 linux无效设备,linux wake_up_interruptible()无效 我正在为操作系统类编写一个“困”设备驱动程序. 它的工作方式是,用户通过read()/ write()访问设备. 当用户像这样写入设备时:写入(fd,& wait,size 怼烎@/ 2023年01月21日 07:30/ 0 赞/ 40 阅读
相关 网络_Wake-on-Lan(WoL)软件推荐, 让你不在局域网也能实现网络唤醒 WoL已是相当成熟的应用, 笔者6年前买的笔电就支持该功能. 应使用需要, 有时候得从外网唤醒电脑, 因而想分享一下自己找到的自认为好用的工具. Windows端(局域网 系统管理员/ 2023年01月07日 11:25/ 0 赞/ 820 阅读
相关 kelvin模型蠕变方程_变形高温合金GH3128高温合金中间换热器冷却管蠕变特性研究... 镍基高温合金是现代航空发动机、航天器和火箭发射机以及舰艇和工业燃气轮机的关键热端部件材料(如涡轮叶片、导向器叶片、燃烧室等),也是核反应堆、化工设备、煤转化技术等工作环境非常严 朴灿烈づ我的快乐病毒、/ 2023年01月04日 15:54/ 0 赞/ 56 阅读
相关 在Linux下通过Wake On LAN实现网络唤醒远程开机 我们经常有这样的场景或需求,人在外面,需要将家里的机器或公司的机器开启,进行远程控制操作。 有几种方式可以实现远程开机,一是通过主板的来电自启动,通过智能开关远程开机。还有一 浅浅的花香味﹌/ 2022年07月15日 12:50/ 0 赞/ 442 阅读
相关 Ship wakes: Kelvin or Mach angle? Ship wakes: Kelvin or Mach angle? [M. Rabaud][], [F. Moisy][] The V-shaped Love The Way You Lie/ 2022年07月13日 01:27/ 0 赞/ 97 阅读
相关 Kelvin wakes https://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/KWake.html ht Watching ducks on 刺骨的言语ヽ痛彻心扉/ 2022年07月13日 01:27/ 0 赞/ 79 阅读
相关 Wake https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wake From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia For other 小咪咪/ 2022年07月13日 01:27/ 0 赞/ 151 阅读
相关 性能优化十六之Wake_Lock唤醒锁以及JobScheduler使用 前言 上一篇博客记录了电量优化中的第一种优化,把一些不需要及时和用户交互的一些操作,放到当用户插上电源的时候。根据自己目前的知识了解,只知道三种优化方式,第二种 妖狐艹你老母/ 2022年04月22日 06:32/ 0 赞/ 298 阅读
还没有评论,来说两句吧...