Ocean Surface Wave

Ocean surface waves are surface waves at the surface of an ocean. That is, a wave that is guided along the interface between water and air. As the wind blows, pressure and friction forces associated with the wind perturb the equilibrium of the ocean surface. The wind actually transfers some of its energy into the water. The water is able to gain energy from the wind because of the friction between the wind and the water. This causes the surface particles to move in nearly circular motion, which is a combination of longitudinal (back and forth) and transverse (up and down) wave motions. The particle motion will appear to be clockwise when viewed such that the direction of wave propogation is to the right. As the depth into the ocean increases, the radius of the circular motion decreases. At a depth equal to the wavelength the amplitude of the motion is only a few percent of the surface amplitude. Individual "freak waves" (also "rogue waves", "monster waves") sometimes occur in the ocean, often as high as 30 meters. Such waves are distinct from tides, caused by the moon and sun's pull, and tsunamis that are caused by underwater earthquakes or landslides.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
ultrasonic welding
vw k70
brenda starr
acetate disc
joey jordison
latin hypercube sampling
isaac murphy (jockey)
cognitive distortion
seattle sounders
united states three cent coin
paraelectricity
bridge circuit
franklin buchanan
punta rock
wacaday
list of rivers in the great basin
ronald l. iman
aterian
surfin' usa
@
mechanochemistry
list of solo cello pieces by composer: t
modern pentathlon at the 2000 summer olympics
samson agonistes
abortion in the netherlands
michael long
senate watergate committee
jim shea
brian fellow's safari planet
brickwood galuteria
ridley pearson
surfer girl
addie joss
hermann rauschning
bounded complete
eugnie grandet
colombian peso
linear temporal logic
holy cow
ex nazis
theory of criminal justice
jarmo
spring based algorithm
himalayan states