Tag: kelvin wake pattern

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    Kelvin Wakes

    Whether you’re watching ducks cruise by on a pond or a boat making its way across the ocean, you’ve probably noticed a distinctive V-shaped wake. This shape is known as a Kelvin wake, and it forms because waves in water don’t all move at the same speed. Instead, the speed a wave travels at depends on its wavelength; smaller wavelengths travel slower than larger ones, a phenomenon known as dispersion. The characteristic shape of a Kelvin wake is the result of many waves of different wavelength (and therefore speed) added together. (Video and image credit: Minute Physics)

  • Kelvin Wakes

    Kelvin Wakes

    Ducks, boats, and other objects moving along water create a distinctive V-shaped pattern known as a Kelvin wake. As the boat moves, it creates disturbance waves of many different wavelengths. The constructive interference of the slower waves compresses them into the shock wave that forms either arm of the V. Sometimes evenly spaced wavelets occur along the arms as well. Between the arms are curved waves that result from other excited wave components. The pattern was first derived by Lord Kelvin as universally true at all speeds – at least for an ideal fluid – but practically speaking, water depth and propeller effects can make a difference. Recently, some physicists have even suggested that above a certain point, an object’s speed can affect the wake shape, but this remains contentious. (Image credit: K. Leidorf; via Colossal; submitted by Peter)