Stokes wave theory

The Stokes fifth-order wave theory is a deep-water wave theory that is valid for relatively large wavelengths.

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Assume that an infinite series of plane, uniform waves travels through the fluid in the positive S-direction. The z-coordinate is chosen to be positive in the vertical direction, so the gravity potential is G=g(z-z0), where z0 is an arbitrary datum.

Assume that the fluid is inviscid and incompressible. The fluid particle velocities are derivable from a flow potential

(1)2ϕ=0
v=-ϕx.

Equilibrium is

ρ(vt+vxv)=-ρGx-px,

where ρ is the fluid density and p is the pressure. Writing v/t in terms of the flow potential then gives

ρ(2ϕxt-vxv)=ρGx+px.

Integrating with respect to x (note that ρ is constant since the fluid is incompressible) gives the Bernoulli equation

ϕt-12vv=G+p-p0ρ+gF(t),

where F(t) is an arbitrary function (which for convenience is set to zero) and p0 is the atmospheric pressure. Substituting in the gravity potential, this is

ϕt-12vv=g(z-zs)+p-p0ρ,

where zs is the undisturbed surface level. From this equation the total pressure at a point below the instantaneous fluid surface is

p=p0+ρg(zs-z)+pdyn.

Hence, the total pressure is the air pressure plus the hydrostatic pressure plus the dynamic pressure, pdyn, where pdyn is given by

pdyn=ρ(ϕt-12vv).

Let η be the elevation of the free surface above this level. At the free surface the Bernoulli equation is

(ϕt-12vv)|z=η+zs=gη,

assuming the pressure at the surface is negligible.

Assuming the waves are uniform, of wavelength λ and period τ, and that they travel in the positive S-direction means that the solution as a function of S and t must appear in terms of a phase angle

θ=2π(Sλ-tτ+α360)=2πλ(S-c¯t+λα360),

where c¯=λτ is the wave celerity. This means that, for any function in the solution,

t=-c¯s.

Thus, at the free surface boundary

ϕt=-c¯ϕs=c¯vs,

and the Bernoulli equation at the free surface is

(-c¯vs+1/2(vv))|z=η+zS=-gη

or

(2)(vz2+(vs-c¯)2)|z=η+zS=c¯2-zgη.

A further boundary condition at the free surface is that the fluid particle velocity relative to the wave celerity must be tangential to the slope of the wave:

(3)vzvs-c¯|z=η+zs=ηs.

At the seabed (z=zb), there is no fluid motion in the vertical direction:

-vz=ϕz|z=zb=0.

The problem now consists of finding a potential function, ϕ, that satisfies Equation 1—the boundary condition at the seabed—as well as the boundary conditions at the surface—Equation 2 and Equation 3.

Stokes proposed a power series solution to this problem, and Skjelbreia and Hendrickson (1960) have obtained that solution to fifth-order. The potential function is assumed to be

(4)βϕc¯=2πϕλc¯=(μA11+μ3A13+μ5A15)cosh[β(z-zb)]sinθ-(μ2A22+μ4A24)cosh[2β(z-zb)]sin2θ+(μ3A33+μ5A35)cosh[3β(z-zb)]sin3θ-μ4A44cosh[4β(z-zb)]sin4θ+μ5A55cosh[5β(z-zb)]sin5θ,

where β=2π/λ, the Aij are constants that depend on the ratio of water depth to wavelength (zs-zb)/λ, and μ is a parameter. The wave profile, η(θ), is assumed to be

(5)βη=-μcosθ+(μ2B22+μ4B24)cos2θ-(μ3B33+μ5B35)cos3θ+μ4B44cos4θ-μ5B55cos5θ,

where the Bij are constants for a given water depth and wavelength. Finally, it is assumed that

(6)βc¯2=c02(1+μ2C1+μ4C2)

and that

βF=μ2C3+μ4C4.

Skjelbreia and Hendrickson obtain the 18 constants Aij,    Bij, Ci, and c0 from matching terms in equal powers of μ and cosθ in the free surface boundary conditions, Equation 2 and Equation 3. They give the constants as functions of s=sinh[β(zs-zb)],    c=cosh[β(zs-zb)], as

c02=gs/c,A11=1/s,
A13=-c25c2+18s5,A15=-1184c1-1440c8-1992c6+2641c4-249c2+181536s11,A22=38s4,A24=192c8-424c6-312c4+480c2-17768s10,A33=13-4c264s7,A35=512c12+4224c10-6800c8-12808c6+167704c4-3154c2+1074096s13(6c2-1),A44=80c6-816c4+1338c2-1971536s10(6c2-1),A55=-2880c10-72480c8+324000c6-432000c4+163470c2-1624561440s11(6c2-1)(8c4-11c2+3),B22=c2c2+14s3,B24=c272c8-504c6-192c4+322c2+21384s9,B33=38c6+164s6,B35=88128c14-208224c12+70848c10+54000c8-21816c6+6264c4-54c2-8112288s12(6c2-1),B44=c768c10-448c8-48c6+48c4+106c2-21384s9(6c2-1),B55=192000c16-262720c14+83680c12+20160c10-7280c812288s10(6c2-1)(8c4-11c2+3)+        7160c6-1800c4-1050c2+22512288s10(6c2-1)(8c4-11c2+3),C1=8c4-8c2+98s4,C2=3840c12-4096c10-2592c8-1008c6+5944c4-1830c2+147512s10(6c2-1).

Skjelbreia and Hendrickson (1960) have a factor +2592 multiplying c8 in the equation for C2. This was corrected to −2592 by Nishimura et al. (1970).

They then obtain equations for β(=2π/λ) and μ. The wave height is

H=ηcrest-ηtrough=η|θ=π-η|θ=0,

so Equation 5 gives

(7)H=λπ[μ+μ3B33+μ5(B35+B55)].

Also, the form assumed for the wave celerity gives

(8)βc¯2=2πλτ2=c02(1+μ2C1+μ4C2).

Given the wave period, wave height, and water depth, Equation 7 and Equation 8 must be solved simultaneously for the wavelength, λ, and the parameter μ. This is done with a Newton method, using the Airy (linear) wave solution as an initial guess.