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arXiv:1702.06275 [physics.flu-dyn]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Time-frequency analysis of ship wave patterns in shallow water: modelling and experiments

Ravindra Pethiyagoda, Scott W. McCue, Timothy J. Moroney, Gregor J. MacFarlane, Jonathan R. Binns

Published 2017-02-21Version 1

A spectrogram of a ship wake is a heat map that visualises the time-dependent frequency spectrum of surface height measurements taken at a single point as the ship travels by. Spectrograms are easy to compute and, if properly interpreted, have the potential to provide crucial information about various properties of the ship in question. Here we use geometrical arguments and analysis of an idealised mathematical model to identify features of spectrograms, concentrating on the effects of a finite-depth channel. Our results depend heavily on whether the flow regime is subcritical or supercritical. To support our theoretical predictions, we compare with data taken from experiments conducted in a model test basin using a variety of realistic ship hulls. Finally, we note that vessels with a high aspect ratio appear to produce spectrogram data that contains periodic patterns. We can reproduce this behaviour in a mathematical model by using a so-called two-point wavemaker.

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