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Transcript of © Dstl 2006 Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence 02 June 2015 Some applications of PHOENICS in...
© Dstl 2006
Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Some applications of PHOENICS in the underwater environment at the Defence Science and Technology
Laboratory (Dstl)
Dr R P Hornby
Defence Science and Technology Laboratory
Winfrith, UK
NASA Space Shuttle Flight STS-7 18.5N 111.5E 23 June 1983
This work was carried out as part of
the Electronics Systems Research Programme
PHOENICS European User Group Meeting, London, 30th
Nov 2006
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Why PHOENICS?
• Predicting the underwater environment is a challenging problem
– Vital in assessing the performance of underwater sensors and the feasibility of maritime operations
• Shelf Sea and Ocean models (UK Metrological Office)
– Provide environmental information at relatively large scale
– Not currently able to economically resolve the smaller scale processes
• Internal wave motions– Affect water column density structure
– Produce relatively large current pulses
– Enhance turbulence and mixing
– These models also employ a hydrostatic approximation
• Restricted to processes with relatively small vertical velocities– Precludes analysis of large amplitude internal wave propagation
• PHOENICS
– General purpose fluid flow package solving the full equations of motion
• Used to investigate these relatively small scale, but important, environmental effects
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Observations of internal waves
• Regions of most energetic Shelf Edge internal tides– UK Shelf, Bay of Biscay
– China Seas
– Amazon Shelf
– Northwest Australian Shelf, Timor Sea
– Cape Cod Grand Banks, New York Bight, Mid Atlantic Bight
– Bay of Bengal, Andaman Sea
– Mid-Argentine Shelf
– Pakistan/Goa Shelf, Arabian Sea
– Gulf of Panama
– Gulf of Alaska
– North Bering Sea
• Regions of most energetic internal tides at straits, ridges and seamounts
– Strait of Gibraltar
– Strait of Messina
– Strait of Malacca
– Mascarene Ridge
– Mid-Atlantic Ridge
– Hawaian Ridge
– Horseshoe seamounts (Portugal)
– Hebrides Terrace, Anton Dohrn Seamounts (NW of UK)
University of Delaware (US) database
Luzon Strait, South China SeaUK Shelf
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Large amplitude internal waves
• Large amplitude internal waves
– Prevalent where stratified ocean is forced over bathymetry
• Shelf edge regions (eg UK Malin Shelf)• Straits (eg Gibraltar)• Ridges and seamounts
• Amplitudes as large as 100-150m, ‘wavelength’ ~ 1000m
• Phase speed ~1m/s
Wave of depression Wave of elevation
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Radar imaging of internal waves
Adapted from Liu et al 1998; waves are travelling from right to left
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
UK Shelf study area
Shelf Edge Study (SES) area
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18 April 2023
UK Shelf study area
Left: Synthetic Aperture Radar image of SES study area
Right: SES mooring marked with diamonds and labelled S700 to S140. Thermistor chain track shown as dotted line, 0000-0200 19th August 1995. ‘A’ ,’B’ mark position of lead solitons at 1136 on 20th and 21st August 1995.
300m
B
Light bands followed by dark bands
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18 April 2023
UK Shelf study area: internal wave profiles
Malin shelf internal wave. Density (kg/m3) field (left) and horizontal velocity (m/s) field (right) at t=0s. Water depth=140m.
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Internal wave dispersal effects
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
South China Sea
• ASIAEX (Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment)
– ONR sponsored, 2001
• Orr and Mignerey (NRL, 2003) reported in situ measurements
– ADCP (Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler:200, 350kHz)
• Water velocity as function of depth
• Acoustic backscatter from plankton, zooplankton etc or turbulence to map internal wave shape
– CTD (Conductivity Temperature Depth probe)
• Density structure
– RADAR
• Detects internal wave at distance due to backscatter from surface ‘roughness’ induced by passage of wave
• Real time display allows perpendicular traverse of wave
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18 April 2023
Measurement site
Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment, 2001
Transformation, Mixing
Luzon Strait
Generation: Kuroshio, tidal
Spreading
Refraction
Diffraction
Reflection
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Radar imaging of internal waves, South China Sea
From Hsu and Liu 2000
Light bands followed by dark bandsDark bands followed by light bands as waves shoal
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18 April 2023
IW ship survey
Orr and Mignerey, 2003
Ship track (solid line)
Upslope direction (dashed line)
P Mignerey, private communication
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Acoustic backscatter
Orr and Mignerey, 2003
Horizontal axis is time
~70m and 40m amplitude
waves in deep water, travelling from left to right
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18 April 2023
90
95
100
105
110
115
120
1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500
x(m)
Mea
n i
soth
erm
dis
tan
ce f
rom
bo
tto
m (
m)
dt=10s
dt=5s
dt=2.5s
dt=1.25s
Simulation approach
• Computational Fluid Dynamics
– Unsteady 2-D equations of motion, no Coriolis force (Ro>>1), Cartesian grid
• 3rd order accurate spatial upwind scheme
• 1st order implicit in time
• Porosity representation for arbitrary bathymetry
• Grid: dx=15m, dy=2m, dt=1.25s (Determined from previous simulations)
– Source term for bed friction
– Two equation k,e turbulence model with buoyancy effects
– Initial waveform derived from weakly non-linear theory
• Simulate internal wave propagation
– 260m to 100m over 20km range
– Slope gradient 1 in 125
Malin Shelf
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18 April 2023
Density structure
Typical temperature and salinity measurements (left) and resulting averaged density profile (right).
Nmax~ 17cph
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18 April 2023
Initial wave shape and range velocity fields
100m amplitude wave. (Left) Initial density field showing wave shape, KdV shape (dotted) and empirical KdV (solid). (Right) Initial range velocity field.
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18 April 2023
IW profiles
(Left) CFD wave evolution for initial 70m wave and (right) 100m wave. The time interval between each profile is 1250s. The thick dashed line represents the sea bed.
Elevation waves appearing in 175m to 190m depth (measurements record 150m to 180m depth)
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18 April 2023
IW phase speed
Variation of wave phase speed with on shelf propagation. The solid curve represents the 100m
amplitude initial wave and the dashed curve the 70m amplitude initial wave. ASIAEX measurements (coloured) ; Mignerey, private communication
Blue
PurpleGreen
RedYellow
ADCP record (Mignerey, private communication) marked with
features used to determine wave phase speeds
Cyan
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18 April 2023
IW shape
CFD (left) wave profile predictions for the 100m initial wave at t=21250s compared with observations (right, Orr and Mignerey, 2003) from ADCP backscatter intensity. Waves are travelling from left to right.
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18 April 2023
IW velocity field
CFD(left) range velocity comparison for the 100m initial wave at t=21250s with ADCP (right, Orr and Mignerey private communication) range velocity measurements
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18 April 2023
IW kinetic energy – upslope component
Kinetic energy per unit crest length in a control volume centred on the leading wave and extending 2.5km in the upstream and downstream directions (from 22.4m below the surface to 24m above the bottom). Square symbols – 7th May, triangles 8th May. ADCP upslope ke:
Mignerey, private communication.
GM
Total ke from ADCP
Upslope ke from ADCP
Simulation (upslope)
Estimates (with error bar) from ADCP for just lead soliton and
elevation wave
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18 April 2023
Turbulent dissipation rate
(Left) Log10 of the rate of dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy per unit mass at t=11250s (scale range is –9.05 to –3.79). Density contours relative to 1000 kg/m3 are superimposed to illustrate the wave
shape in relation to the dissipation predictions. (Right) Gradient Richardson number plot.
© Dstl 2006
Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Turbulent dissipation rate
(Left) Log10 of the rate of dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy per unit mass at t=21250s (scale range is –9.05 to –3.84). Density contours relative to 1000 kg/m3 are superimposed to illustrate the
wave shape in relation to the dissipation predictions. (Right) Gradient Richardson number plot.
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18 April 2023
Turbulent dissipation rate – elevation waves
Peak dissipation rate levels ~10-4 W/kg predicted in the elevation waves
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Turbulence levels
• Turbulent kinetic energy integrated over a control volume 2.5km upstream and downstream of leading wave
• Energy dissipation rate by turbulence in a control volume 2.5km upstream and downstream of leading wave
• Energy dissipation rate and turbulence levels peak as elevation waves form
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18 April 2023
Ambient turbulence
Open literature, various sources
Dstl Mixed Layer Model
Dstl Mixed Layer Model
Shelf sea -vertical profiler
(UW)
Oregon coast – J Moum
Elevation wave prediction
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Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Bottom shear stress
A bed stress ~ 2N/m**2 would lift sand type
particles with diameter < ~0.1mm (Shields
criterion)
Bed shear stress after formation of elevation wave (note change in
sign due to flow reversal)
Typical shear stress distribution Flow distribution Maximum bed stress with range
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18 April 2023
Bottom sediment transport – passive scalar
(Left) Concentration distribution at t=20000s+1250s from an initial slope line source between 15km and 16.5km range . (Right) Concentration distribution at t=20000s+2500s. Wave position
at t=20000s shown with dashed line. Current wave position shown as solid line.
© Dstl 2006
Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023
Summary
• PHOENICS simulations have produced satisfactory results
• Reasonable agreement for ASIAEX programme– Phase speeds
– Evolving wave shape and flow structure
– Kinetic energy in wave
• Results show strong horizontal and vertical flows and highest levels of turbulence as the wave of depression transforms into waves of elevation
– Turbulence results need validating against measurements
• Improvements to quality and computing time can be achieved
– Second order accurate time discretisation (Ochoa et al PHOENICS J 2004)
– PARSOL for variable bathymetry (Palacio et al PHOENICS J 2004)
• Adaptive formulation?
© Dstl 2006
Dstl is part of the Ministry of Defence
18 April 2023