posted on 2018-11-12, 13:56authored byDaniel Ratliff
Criticality plays a central role in the study of reductions and stability of hydrodynamical systems. At critical points, it is often the case that nonlinear reductions with dispersion arise to govern solution behavior. By considering when such models become bidirectional and lose their initial dispersive properties, it will be shown that higher order dispersive models may be supported in hydrodynamical systems. Precisely, this equation is a two-way Boussinesq equation with sixth order dispersion. The case of two layered shallow water is considered to illustrate this, and it is reasoned why such an environment is natural for such a system to emerge. Further, it is demonstrated that the regions in the parameter space for nontrivial flow, which admit this reduction, are vast and in fact form a continuum. The reduced model is then numerically simulated to illustrate how the two-way and higher dispersive properties suggest more exotic families of solitary wave solutions can emerge in stratified flows.
Funding
The author is in receipt of a fully funded Ph.D studentship under the EPSRC Grant No. EP/L505092/1.
History
School
Science
Department
Mathematical Sciences
Published in
Physics of Fluids
Volume
29
Issue
11
Pages
112104 - 112104
Citation
RATLIFF, D.J., 2017. Vanishing characteristic speeds and critical dispersive points in nonlinear interfacial wave problems. Physics of Fluids, 29 (11), 112104.
This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. The following article appeared in RATLIFF, D.J., 2017. Vanishing characteristic speeds and critical dispersive points in nonlinear interfacial wave problems. Physics of Fluids, 29 (11), 112104 and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4998803.