www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/10/303/2003/ © Author(s) 2003. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Schlieren visualisation and measurement of axisymmetric disturbances Dept. of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Abstract. Synthetic schlieren is a new technique that allows one easily and inexpensively to visualise density variations, such as those caused by internal waves propagating in a density stratified fluid. In the special case of two-dimensional internal waves (for example, those created by an oscillating cylinder), synthetic schlieren allows one to measure non-intrusively the wave amplitudes everywhere in space and time. The technique works by measuring the apparent displacement of points in a digitised image (such as a grid of horizontal lines), which is observed by a CCD camera through the experimental test section. Synthetic schlieren is sufficiently sensitive that it can measure sub-pixel-scale disturbances. In this work, we report on the first step toward measuring fully three-dimensional disturbances. We perform laboratory experiments in which internal waves are generated in a uniformly salt-stratified fluid by a vertically oscillating sphere. Theory predicts that the resulting wave-field is in the form of two cones emanating above and below the sphere. Using inverse tomographic techniques, we exploit the axisymmetry of the wave-field to relate the apparent displacement of pixels in an image to the wave amplitudes. Full Article (PDF, 217 KB) Citation: Sutherland, B. R., Flynn, M. R., and Onu, K.: Schlieren visualisation and measurement of axisymmetric disturbances, Nonlin. Processes Geophys., 10, 303-309, 2003. Bibtex EndNote Reference Manager |
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