The science of "rogue waves"
"Researchers have since determined that rogue waves probably claimed 22 supercarriers and more than 500 lives in the second half of the 20th century alone...
... two schools of thought surfaced regarding how monstrous waves could develop.
The first is the simplest. It starts with the observation that swells
travel at different speeds. When one overtakes another, the two are
combined... Others, however, hold that the most extreme waves form from less
straightforward behavior. In wave tanks, for instance, when one wave
travels right next to another of similar length, energy leaks from one
to the other. The individual swells affect one another in complicated
nonlinear ways...
Standard arithmetic suffices for simple casino games, but this
thinking captures the spirit of a branch of probability known as large
deviation theory (LDT). It specializes in identifying instances of rare
events that are much more common than the next most likely way they
might play out. In the exceptional cases when LDT can be used, it allows
calculations that are impossible with standard statistics,
Vanden-Eijnden said, just as calculus can solve problems that are
intractable in algebra.
The chaotic ocean, the group reasoned, should be the perfect arena to witness LDT in action..."
More information at
Quanta Magazine.
https://susancasey.com/books-list/the-wave This is a really great book about rogue waves.
ReplyDeleteRequested from our library. Thanks!
Deleteyour library is still open? lucky you!
Deletep.s. that quanta article is some good weekend reading.
I-)
Nope. Library is closed. But I can place requests for reading material and movies, and they will be waiting on my shelf when the doors reopen.
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