General linear stability properties of monoclinal shallow waves

Jake Langham*, Andrew J Hogg

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
50 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

We analyze the linear stability of monoclinal traveling waves on a constant incline, which connect uniform flowing regions of differing depths. The classical shallow-water equations are employed, subject to a general resistive drag term. This approach incorporates many flow rheologies into a single setting and enables us to investigate the features that set different systems apart. We derive simple formulas for the onset of linear instability, the corresponding linear growth rates and related properties including the existence of monoclinal waves, development of shocks, and whether instability is initially triggered upstream or downstream of the wave front. Also included within our framework is the presence of shear in the flow velocity profile, which is often neglected in depth-averaged studies. We find that it can significantly modify the threshold for instability. Constant corrections to the governing equations to account for sheared profiles via a “momentum shape factor” act to stabilize traveling waves. More general correction terms are found to have a nontrivial and potentially important quantitative effect on the properties explored. Finally, we have investigated the spatial properties of the dominant (fastest growing) linear modes. We derive equations for their amplitude and frequency and find that both features can become severely amplified near the front of the traveling wave. For flood waves that propagate into a dry downstream region, this amplification is unbounded in the limit of high disturbance frequency. We show that the rate of divergence is a function of the spatial dependence of the wave depth profile at the front, which may be determined straightforwardly from the drag law.
Original languageEnglish
Article number053902
Number of pages27
JournalPhysical Review Fluids
Volume7
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 May 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank D. Barkley, L. T. Jenkins, C. G. Johnson, J. C. Phillips, L. S. Tuckerman, and M. J. Woodhouse for valuable discussions. This research was supported by the Newton Fund Grant No. NE/S00274X/1 and the Royal Society Grant No. APX/R1/180148.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Physical Society.

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