Field observations of shear waves in the surf zone

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Authors
Noyes, T. James
Guza, R. T.
Elgar, Steve
Herbers, T.H.C.
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2004-01-31
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American Geophysical Union
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en_US
Abstract
Alongshore propagating meanders of the mean alongshore current in the surf zone called shear waves have periods of a few minutes and wavelengths of a few hundred meters. Here shear wave properties are estimated with arrays of current meters deployed for 4 months within 300 m of the shoreline of a sandy beach. Shear wave velocity fluctuations are approximately horizontally isotropic, with root mean square values between 10 and 40% of the mean (3-hour-averaged) alongshore current V. Cross-shore variations of the time-averaged shear wave momentum flux are consistent with shear wave energy generation close to shore where the breaking wave-driven mean alongshore current V and current shear Vx are strong and with shear wave energy dissipation and transfer back to the mean flow farther offshore where V and Vx are weak. In case studies where V is a narrow jet near the shoreline the observed strong decay of shear wave energy levels seaward of the jet, and the cross-shore and alongshore structure of shear waves within the jet, are similar to predictions based on the linearly unstable modes of the observed V. Shear wave energy levels also are high in a marginally unstable case with a strong, but weakly sheared, V.
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This research was supported by the Office of Naval Research, the National Ocean Partnership Program and the National Science Foundation.
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Journal of Geophysical Research 109 (2004): C01031, doi:10.1029/2002JC001761.
Journal of Geophysical Research 109 (2004): C01031
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