- Wave turbulence
Wave turbulence is a set of
wave s deviated far fromthermal equilibrium . Such state is accompanied bydissipation . It is eitherdecaying turbulence or requires external source ofenergy to sustain it. Examples are waves on afluid surface excited bywind s orship s, and waves in plasma excited byelectromagnetic waves etc.External sources by some resonant mechanism usually excite waves with frequencies andwavelength s in some narrow interval. For example, shaking container with the frequency ω excites surface waveswith the frequency ω/2 (parametric resonance discovered byMichael Faraday ).When wave
amplitude s are small (which usually means that the wave is far from breaking) only those waves exist that are directly excited by an external source. When, however, wave amplitudes are not very small (for surface waves when the fluid surface is inclined by more than few degrees) wave with different frequencies start to interact. That leads to an excitation of waves with frequencies and wavelengths in wide intervals, not necessarily in resonance with an external source. It can be observed in the experiments with a high amplitude of shaking that initially the waves appear which are inresonance , then both longer and shorter waves appear as a result of wave interaction. The appearance of shorter waves is referred to as a direct cascade while longer waves are part of aninverse cascade of wave turbulence.References
*cite book
last = Pedlosky
first = J.
authorlink =
title = Geophysical fluid dynamics
publisher = Springer
year = 1987
*cite book
last = Zakharov
first = V.E.
coauthors =Lvov V.S.; Falkovich G.E.
authorlink =
title = Kolmogorov Spectra of Turbulence
place = Berlin
publisher =Springer-Verlag
year = 1992
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