Record Details

Field observations of the wave bottom boundary layer

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Field observations of the wave bottom boundary layer
Names Foster, D. L. (creator)
Beach, R. A. (creator)
Holman, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 2000-08-15 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract This paper presents a comprehensive set of velocity and suspended sediment
observations in the nearshore wave bottom boundary layer, collected during the Duck94
field experiment on the Outer Banks of the North Carolina coast. Cross-shore velocity measurements
in the wave bottom boundary layer were made using five hot film anemometers,
nominally spaced from 1 to 5 cm above the bed in 2 m of water depth. The time-varying
location of the seabed was estimated to roughly 1 cm with a stacked set of bed-penetrating
fiber-optic backscatter sensors. The instrument array was intermittently located in the surf
zone on the crest of a bar. The location of the bottom varied several centimeters over a
34 min data run. Even over 4 min segments of quasi-steady statistics, occasional large
waves caused short erosion and redeposition events, complicating the definition of bottom
location and causing the root-mean-square velocity statistics to be nonzero below the mean
bed location. This leads to obvious difficulties in comparisons with two, one-dimensional
time-dependent, eddy viscosity wave bottom boundary layer models. For example, bed
shears based on rms amplitude decay were lower than predicted. The observations show
some evidence for a velocity overshoot region within the wave bottom boundary layer. The
observations were compared with two linear eddy viscosity models. Larger estimates of a
constant eddy viscosity and smaller than predicted phase leads are indicative of more rapid
mixing of momentum than predicted by the models. The phase and amplitude frequency
response estimated with frequency domain empirical orthogonal functions shows a nonlinear
response of the wave bottom boundary layer over the incident band. These observations
are among the first coherent looks at the wave bottom boundary layer under conditions of
significant sediment response. They highlight the added complexity of the dynamics in
natural environments.
Genre Article
Identifier Beach, R. A., Foster, D. L., and Holman, R. A., (2000). Field observations of the wave bottom boundary layer. J. Geophys. Res., 105, C8.

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press