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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Structure and Persistence of Surface Ship Wakes

Somero, John Ryan 20 January 2021 (has links)
It has long been known that ship wakes are observable by synthetic aperture radar. However, incomplete physical understanding has prevented the development of simulation tools that can predict both the structure and persistence of wakes in the ocean environment. It is the focus of this work to develop an end-to-end multi-scale modeling-and-simulation methodology that captures the known physics between the source of disturbance and the sensor. This includes turbulent hydrodynamics, free-surface effects, environmental forcing through Langmuir-type circulations, generation of surface currents and redistribution of surface-active substances, surface-roughness modification, and simulation of the signature generated by reflection and scattering of electromagnetic waves from the ocean surface. The end-to-end methodology is based upon several customized computational fluid dynamics solvers and empirical models which are linked together. The unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations, including models for the Craik-Leibovich vortex force and near surface Reynolds-stress anisotropy, are solved at full-scale Reynolds and Froude numbers on domains that extend tens of kilometers behind the ship. A parametric study is undertaken to explore the effects of ship heading, ship propulsion, ocean-wave amplitude and wavelength, and the relative importance of Langmuir-type circulations vs. near-surface Reynolds-stress anisotropy on the generation of surface currents that are transverse to the wake centerline. Due to the vortex force, the structure of the persistent wake is shown to be a function of the relative angle between the ambient long-wavelength swell and the ship heading. Ships operating in head seas observe 1-3 streaks, while ships operating in following seas observe 2 symmetric streaks. Ships operating in calm seas generate similar wakes to those in following seas, but with reduced wake width and persistence. In addition to the structure of the persistent wake, the far wake is shown to be dominated by ship-induced turbulence and surface-current gradients generating a wide center wake. The redistribution of surface-active substances by surface currents is simulated using a scalar-transport model on the ocean surface. Simulation of surface-roughness modification is accomplished by solving a wave-action balance model which accounts for the relative change in the ambient wave-spectrum by the surface currents and the damping-effects of surface-active substances and turbulence. Simulated returns from synthetic aperture radar are generated with two methods implemented. The first method generates a perfect SAR image where the instrument and platform based errors are neglected, but the impact of a randomized ocean field on the radar cross section is considered. The second method simulates the full SAR process including signal detection and processing. Comparisons are made to full-scale field experiments with good agreement between the structure of the persistent wake and observed SAR imagery. / 1 / It has long been known that ship wakes are observable by synthetic aperture radar. However, incomplete physical understanding has prevented the development of simulation tools that can predict both the structure and persistence of wakes in the ocean environment, which is critical to understanding both the design and operation of maritime remote sensors as well as providing tactically relevant operational guidance and awareness of the maritime domain. It is the focus of this work to develop an end-to-end multi-scale modeling-and simulation methodology that captures the known physics between the source of disturbance and the sensor. This includes turbulent hydrodynamics, free-surface effects, environmental forcing, generation of surface currents and redistribution of surface-active substances, surface-roughness modification, and simulation of the signature from the ocean surface. The end-to-end methodology is based upon several customized computational fluid dynamics solvers and empirical models. The unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations, including models to account for environmental effects and near-surface turbulence, are solved at full-scale on domains that extend tens of kilometers behind the ship. A parametric study is undertaken to explore the effects of ship heading, ship propulsion, ocean-wave amplitude and wavelength, and the relative importance of environmental forcing vs. near-surface turbulence on the generation of surface currents that are transverse to the wake centerline. Due to the environmental forcing, the structure of the persistent wake is shown to be a function of the relative angle between the ambient long-wavelength swell and the ship heading. Ships operating in head seas observe 1-3 streaks, while ships operating in following seas observe 2 symmetric streaks. Ships operating in calm seas generate similar wakes to those in following seas, but with reduced wake width and persistence. In addition to the structure of the persistent wake, the far wake is shown to be dominated by ship-induced turbulence and surface-current gradients generating a wide center wake. The redistribution of surface films by surface currents is simulated using a scalar-transport model on the ocean surface. Simulation of surface-roughness modification is accomplished by solving a wave-action-balance model which accounts for the relative change in the ambient surface profile by the surface currents and the damping-effects of surface-active substances and turbulence. Simulated returns from synthetic aperture radar are generated with two methods implemented. The first method generates a perfect SAR image where the instrument and platform based errors are neglected, but the impact of a randomized ocean field on the radar cross section is considered. The second method simulates the full SAR process including signal detection and processing. Comparisons are made to full-scale field experiments with good agreement between the structure of the persistent wake and observed SAR imagery.

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