Long-term nearshore wave climate prediction requires an efficient solution method for the propagation of directional random waves from offshore. Predictions of laboratory data for waves over submerged shoals indicate that waves with broad, but not narrow, directional spread are well predicted without taking diffraction into account, and an efficient parabolic, ‘ray-tracing’ solver may thus be used. Application to the complex coastal bathymetry off East Anglia indicates that inshore wave climate is generally only slightly affected by the degree of directionality, tidal currents, and wind forcing over the propagation region. It thus seems realistic to define inshore wave climate for a range of offshore conditions, defined only by wave height, period and direction, and of course tidal level, using an efficient parabolic solver.
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September 2004
Research Article|
September 01 2004
Modelling directional random wave propagation inshore Available to Purchase
C.-P. Kuang;
C.-P. Kuang
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, University of Manchester
UK
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P.K. Stansby
P.K. Stansby
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, University of Manchester
UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
September 12 2003
Accepted:
September 19 2004
Online ISSN: 1751-7737
Print ISSN: 1741-7597
© 2004 Thomas Telford Ltd
2004
Maritime Engineering (2004) 157 (3): 123–131.
Article history
Received:
September 12 2003
Accepted:
September 19 2004
Citation
Kuang C, Stansby P (2004), "Modelling directional random wave propagation inshore". Maritime Engineering, Vol. 157 No. 3 pp. 123–131, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/maen.2004.157.3.123
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