You guys are mostly way over my head, but it just occurred to me that the initial displacement of water around a sub happens when it submerges. Once it is submerged and the sub starts to move forward, the water in front of it has to go somewhere. Does it move upward to create a bulge or wave on the surface of the ocean? No, it moves around the sub and behind it into the space the sub is vacating! Nature abhors a vacuum, you know. ;-) Chuck Holst -----Original Message----- From: Dave Kruger [mailto:dkruger_at_pacifier.com] Sent: Wednesday, June 02, 1999 5:58 AM To: Matt Broze; PaddleWise Subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Pro's and Con's of the Matt Broze wrote: > Nick responded: > >Submarines do have wave drag, it is just very small. Submarines have the > >advantage that they can displace water in every direction. So, they don't > >have to displace as much water to acheive the same motion. > > This doesn't seem to make sense. Liquids like water are virtually > incomressable, which is why they do not make good shock absorbers but work > well in the brake lines of your car. Water flowing under a sub can not be > squeezed between it and the bottom so something must go up. Either the sub > and all the water directly above it or all the water the sub is displacing. > I don't really know if this reaches the surface in the form of a wake and if > so where. [big snip] I read Nick's statement: "they don't have to displace as much water to achieve the same motion..." as meaning "they don't have to displace as much water *per unit of surface area of contact with the water* ..., " but now that I've typed that, I'm not so sure. Maybe *Nick* will tell us what he meant! <g> I suspect that submarine "wave-making" has substantially different characteristics than "wave making" by a surface ship, inasmuch as the surface ship's wave-making is mostly (?) at the surface of the water. In contrast, a submarine is neutrally buoyant, so the restoring forces are almost entirely due to the visco-elastic properties of water, and I do not see that there must be a rise in the water surface *fully equal to* the sub's volume as it passes through a water mass. Rather, displacement of the surrounding water is (mainly) normal to the sub's surface, and would propagate to the sides, bottom, and top of the sub. (Agreed the component which goes down can't compress the water there -- so some fraction of the sub's displaced volume has to go up!) 'Bout that component of a surface ship's "wave making" which may not be very evident (in deep water) as a change in vertical position of the surface: you must be acquainted with the "surge" off a ship's bow which reaches an observer ahead of the "main" wake. I don't think I have ever detected that surge when floating in deep water near a ship passing by, but see it every time when the ship passes shallow water as a slow "suck" followed by a huge "surge." You know what I'm talking about, Matt? I think that "surge" wave is a different kind of water wave than the "bow wave" we see as massive vertical displacement of the surface of the water. Could be just a very low amplitude, very LONG wave-length surface wave, now that I think about it, I guess. Or, am I all wet? -- Dave Kruger Astoria, OR *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List Submissions: paddlewise_at_lists.intelenet.net Subscriptions: paddlewise-request_at_lists.intelenet.net Website: http://www.gasp-seakayak.net/paddlewise/ ***************************************************************************Received on Wed Jun 02 1999 - 15:23:12 PDT
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