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Edge waves in the presence of strong longshore currents

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Title Edge waves in the presence of strong longshore currents
Names Howd, Peter A. (creator)
Bowen, Anthony J. (creator)
Holman, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 1992 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract A form of the linear, inviscid shallow water wave equation which includes alongshore uniform, but
cross-shore variable, longshore currents and bathymetry is presented. This formulation provides a
continuum between gravity waves (either leaky or edge waves) on a longshore current, and the
recently discovered shear waves. In this paper we will concentrate on gravity wave solutions for which
V(x)/c < 1, where V(x) is the longshore current, and c is the edge wave celerity. The effects of the
current can be uniquely accounted for in terms of a modification to the true beach profile, h'(x) = h(x)
[I - V(x)/c]¯², where h(x) is the true profile and h'(x) is the effective profile. This is particularly
useful in conceptualizing the combined effects of longshore currents and variable bottom topography.
We have solved numerically for the dispersion relationship and the cross-shore shapes of edge waves
on a plane beach under a range of current conditions. Changes to the edge wave alongshore
wavenumber, K, of over 50% are found for reasonable current profiles, showing that the departure
from plane beach dispersion due to longshore currents can be of the same order as the effect of
introducing nonplanar topography. These changes are not symmetric as they are for profile changes;
IKI increases for edge waves opposing the current flow (a shallower effective profile), but decreases for
those coincident with the flow (a deeper effective profile). The cross-shore structure of the edge waves
is also strongly modified. As lkl increases (decreases), the nodal structure shifts landward (seaward)
from the positions found on the test beach in the absence of a current. In addition, the predicted
variances away from the nodes, particularly for the alongshore component of edge wave orbital
velocity, may change dramatically from the no-current case. Many of the edge wave responses are
related to the ratio V max/c, where V max is the maximum current, and to the dimensionless cross-shore
scale of the current, lkl x(V max), where x(V max) is the cross-shore distance to V max. This is most easily
understood in terms of the effective profile and the strong dependence of the edge waves on the details
of the inner part of the beach profile. Inclusion of the longshore current also has implications regarding
the role of edge waves in the generation of nearshore morphology. For example, in the absence of a
current, two phase-locked edge waves of equal frequency and mode progressing in opposite directions
are expected to produce a crescentic bar. However, in the presence of a current, the wavenumbers
would differ, stretching the expected crescentic bar into a welded bar. A more interesting effect is the
possibility that modifications to the edge waves due to the presence of a virtual bar in the effective
profile could lead to the development of a real sand bar on the true profile. These modifications appear
to be only weakly sensitive to frequency, in contrast to the relatively strong dependence of the
traditional model of sand bar generation at infragravity wave nodes.
Genre Article
Identifier Bowen, A. J., Holman, R. A., and Howd, P. A. (1992), Edge waves in the presence of strong longshore currents. J. Geophys. Res., 97, C7.

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