Research

Calming the Waves

A rendered image of two resonant side cavities in a water channel. These cavities create waves that cancel out the incoming waves, creating a calm area downstream.

Wave action can be a major source of erosion along riverbanks and shorelines. But in a recent study, scientists were able to perfectly absorb incoming waves to create a downstream region with calm, wave-free waters.

Experimental data shows that waves approaching from the left interact with the resonant chambers and get perfectly absorbed, leaving the water on the right side still.
Experimental data shows that waves approaching from the left interact with the resonant chambers and get perfectly absorbed, leaving the water on the right side still.

The group began with a narrow channel that waves could move down. They added two small, side-by-side cavities perpendicular to the channel; as waves travel down the channel, they resonate with the cavities, which reflect and transmit their own waves back into the channel. With the right tuning to the size and spacing of the cavities, the team was able to make the cavities’ waves perfectly cancel the channel’s waves. The group demonstrated this absorption theoretically, numerically, and experimentally.

Currently, they’ve only managed perfect absorption with a single wave frequency, but an array of cavities should be able to absorb a range of incoming waves. The authors hope their work will one day help protect coastal structures and prevent erosion by countering incoming waves. (Image and research credit: L-P. Euvé et al.; via APS Physics)

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