gokul.er137 Posted August 16, 2009 Posted August 16, 2009 i was intrigued by how to solve this. the phase velocity of ocean waves is sqrt(g*lambda/2*pi) where g - acceleration due to gravity, lambda is the wavelength of the wave. The question is find the group velocity. I tried many things but was not able to get to a proper answer. Any help?
Klaynos Posted August 16, 2009 Posted August 16, 2009 Can you write down the equation for the phase velocity and the equation for the group velocity?
gokul.er137 Posted August 16, 2009 Author Posted August 16, 2009 vp -> phase velocity vg -> group velocity generally vp ->c^2(speed of light squared)/vg Doing that and substituting does not give me a satisfactory answer. On a more conceptual note -> group velocity is the rate of change of angular velocity('delta'omega) with the change in wave number('delta'k). Phase velocity is omega/k , that is at any particular instant. So to get the group velocity I could also differentiate omega with respect to k, but I do not know anything about them either.
Klaynos Posted August 16, 2009 Posted August 16, 2009 Your second part is correct. The first is a special case. [math] v_g = \frac {d \omega} {dk}[/math] [math] v_p = \frac { \omega} {k} = \frac {\lambda} {T} [/math] [math] v_p = \sqrt{g*\lambda/2*pi} [/math] From that you can make some substitutions and find vg
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now