Bragg scattering of flexural-gravity waves by a series of polynyas in the context of blocking dynamics

Flexural-gravity wave scattering due to an array of polynyas is investigated from the perspective of the blocking dynamics. The canonical eigenfunction expansion method is generalized to account for multiple propagating wave modes within blocking frequencies. Bragg scattering occurs due to the prese...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Physics of Fluids
Main Authors: Barman, S. C., Boral, S., Sahoo, T.
Other Authors: Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, India
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0131244
https://pubs.aip.org/aip/pof/article-pdf/doi/10.1063/5.0131244/16674333/016601_1_online.pdf
Description
Summary:Flexural-gravity wave scattering due to an array of polynyas is investigated from the perspective of the blocking dynamics. The canonical eigenfunction expansion method is generalized to account for multiple propagating wave modes within blocking frequencies. Bragg scattering occurs due to the presence of multiple gaps in the floating ice sheet, and the number of sub-harmonic peaks in wave reflection becomes one/two less than the number of gaps as the reflection coefficient varies with a change in gap/ice-sheet length. In addition, the amplitudes of harmonic peaks in wave reflection increase with an increase in the number of gaps. The variation of wave reflection with an increase in wavenumber/length of the ice sheet depicts that common zero minima occur for an even number of gaps, while common sub-harmonic maxima occur for an odd number of gaps. The scattering coefficients vary between zero and unity within the blocking frequencies, despite the individual amplitudes of the scattered waves becoming more than unity for certain frequencies. Noticeably, higher amplitudes of the scattered waves are associated with lower energy transfer rates and vice versa. Extrema in wave reflection occur for higher values of frequency within the primary and secondary blocking points. In addition, removable discontinuities are found in the scattering coefficient at the blocking frequencies, whereas a jump discontinuity is observed for certain frequencies within the blocking limits due to the incident wave mode conversion. Moreover, irregularities in the ice sheet's deflection are observed for any frequency within the blocking limit due to the superposition of three propagating wave modes.