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Nearshore sandbar migration predicted by an eddy-diffusive boundary layer model

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Field Value
Title Nearshore sandbar migration predicted by an eddy-diffusive boundary layer model
Names Henderson, Stephen M. (creator)
Allen, John S. (creator)
Newberger, P. A. (creator)
Date Issued 2004 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract We simulated the erosion and accretion of a natural beach using a wave-resolving
eddy-diffusive model of water and suspended sediment motion in the bottom boundary
layer. Nonlinear advection was included in this one-dimensional (vertical profile) model
by assuming that waves propagated almost without change of form. Flows were forced by
fluctuating pressure gradients chosen to reproduce the velocity time series measured
during the Duck94 field experiment. The cross-shore flux of suspended sediment beneath
each field-deployed current meter was estimated, and beach erosion (accretion) was
calculated from the divergence (convergence) of this flux. Horizontal pressure forces on
sediment particles were neglected. The model successfully predicted two bar migration
events (one shoreward bar migration and one seaward) but failed to predict a third
(seaward migration) event. Simulated seaward sediment transport was due to seaward
mean currents. Simulated shoreward sediment transport was due to covariance between
wave-frequency fluctuations in velocity and sediment concentration and was mostly
confined to the wave boundary layer. Predicted seaward (shoreward) bar migration was
driven by a maximum in the current-generated (wave-generated) flux over the sandbar. A
wave-generated downward flux of shoreward momentum into the wave boundary layer
contributed to shoreward sediment transport and often had a local maximum over the bar
crest. Second-order nonlinear advection of sediment, mostly representing shoreward
advection by the Stokes drift, also often had a local maximum over the bar crest. Together,
wave-generated momentum fluxes and the Stokes drift substantially increased shoreward
transport and were essential to predictions of shoreward bar migration.
Genre Article
Identifier Allen, J. S., Henderson, S. M., and P. A. Newberger (2004), Nearshore sandbar migration predicted by an eddy-diffusive boundary layer model, J. Geophys. Res., 109, C06024.

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