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Why do the water particles in a water wave, move in circular paths? What's the exact mechanics behind that motion? See this page for a nice pic of the motion:
http://www.kettering.edu/~drussell/Demos/waves/wavemotion.html#water
Also, why does this motion, ultimately lead to a propagation of a wave, once a disturbance has occured?
russ_watters
Dec13-08, 03:00 PM
In short: in order for the water level in one spot to rise, water must flow in from nearby.
tankFan86
Dec13-08, 04:13 PM
Check out Svendsen's Introduction to Nearshore Hydrodynamics (http://books.google.com/books?id=g7-PHmnrvQcC&dq=near+shore+hydrodynamics&pg=PP1&ots=MHXYR1t0TF&source=bn&sig=QOANMG8R5O_v66gffWA6u-hT__4&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result). He has several excellent selections on water wave theory.
In short: in order for the water level in one spot to rise, water must flow in from nearby.Okey. But why circular? Why not just vertical like in a rope? And what pushes the water, leading to this flow?
Check out Svendsen's Introduction to Nearshore Hydrodynamics (http://books.google.com/books?id=g7-PHmnrvQcC&dq=near+shore+hydrodynamics&pg=PP1&ots=MHXYR1t0TF&source=bn&sig=QOANMG8R5O_v66gffWA6u-hT__4&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result). He has several excellent selections on water wave theory.Ouh, pretty advanced stuff. Didn't make me much wiser at the topic... :yuck:
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