Wave Celerity Shallow Deep Calculator
Calculate wave celerity shallow deep with our free science calculator. Uses standard scientific formulas with unit conversions and explanations.
Formula
Deep: C = gT/(2*pi) | Shallow: C = sqrt(g*d) | General: C = (gT/2*pi) * tanh(2*pi*d/L)
Where C is wave celerity (phase velocity), g is gravitational acceleration (9.81 m/s2), T is wave period, d is water depth, and L is wavelength. The depth regime is determined by the ratio d/L.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Deep Water Swell Propagation
Problem: A 10-second period swell propagates across the Pacific Ocean. Calculate the deep water celerity, wavelength, and group velocity.
Solution: Deep water celerity C = gT/(2*pi) = 9.81 * 10 / 6.2832 = 15.61 m/s\nDeep water wavelength L = gT^2/(2*pi) = 9.81 * 100 / 6.2832 = 156.13 m\nGroup velocity Cg = C/2 = 15.61 / 2 = 7.81 m/s\nEnergy travels at 7.81 m/s = 28.1 km/hr
Result: Celerity: 15.61 m/s | Wavelength: 156.13 m | Group Velocity: 7.81 m/s
Example 2: Shallow Water Wave Near Shore
Problem: The same 10-second wave approaches a beach with 2 meters water depth. Calculate the shallow water celerity and compare to deep water values.
Solution: Shallow water celerity C = sqrt(g*d) = sqrt(9.81 * 2) = 4.43 m/s\nShallow water wavelength L = C * T = 4.43 * 10 = 44.3 m\nGroup velocity = phase velocity = 4.43 m/s (non-dispersive)\nShoaling coefficient Ks = sqrt(7.81/4.43) = 1.33\nWave height increases by factor of 1.33
Result: Shallow Celerity: 4.43 m/s (71.6% reduction) | Wavelength: 44.3 m | Ks = 1.33
Frequently Asked Questions
What is wave celerity and how does it differ from group velocity?
Wave celerity, also called phase velocity, is the speed at which an individual wave crest travels through the water. Group velocity is the speed at which the overall wave energy envelope propagates, and it determines how fast wave energy reaches a coastline. In deep water, group velocity is exactly half the phase velocity, meaning individual wave crests travel twice as fast as the wave group itself. You can observe this by watching waves within a group appear at the back, travel forward through the group, and disappear at the front. In shallow water, phase velocity equals group velocity because waves become non-dispersive. Understanding the distinction is critical for wave forecasting and coastal engineering because energy transport depends on group velocity, not phase velocity.
What determines whether water is deep or shallow for wave propagation?
The classification of water depth depends on the ratio of water depth to wavelength, not the absolute depth alone. Deep water conditions exist when the depth-to-wavelength ratio exceeds 0.5, meaning the water is deeper than half the wavelength. Shallow water conditions occur when the ratio is less than 0.05, and intermediate conditions lie between these limits. A 10-second wave with a 156-meter wavelength would be in deep water at 80 meters depth but in intermediate water at 50 meters. This relative measure matters because wave motion decreases exponentially with depth, and when the bottom is within approximately half a wavelength, the circular orbital motion of water particles becomes flattened by interaction with the seabed, fundamentally changing wave behavior.
How does wave celerity change as waves approach shore?
As waves propagate from deep water toward shore, their celerity decreases because it becomes increasingly controlled by water depth rather than wave period. In deep water, celerity depends only on period through the formula C = gT/(2*pi). In shallow water, celerity depends only on depth through C = sqrt(g*d), making all waves travel at the same speed regardless of period. This transition causes several important phenomena: waves slow down, wavelengths shorten, wave heights increase through shoaling, and wave crests bend to become more parallel to the shoreline through refraction. The energy carried by waves is conserved during this process, so as waves slow and wavelengths compress, the wave height must increase to maintain constant energy flux, ultimately leading to wave breaking.
What is wave shoaling and how is the shoaling coefficient calculated?
Wave shoaling is the process by which wave height changes as waves propagate from deep water into shallower water, even without energy loss. The shoaling coefficient Ks relates the wave height at any depth to the deep water wave height through H = Ks times H0. It is calculated as the square root of the ratio of deep water group velocity to local group velocity: Ks = sqrt(Cg0 / Cg). Initially as waves enter intermediate depths, the shoaling coefficient actually decreases slightly below 1.0, causing a small reduction in wave height. As waves continue into shallower water, the coefficient increases above 1.0, causing wave height to grow. This growth continues until the wave becomes unstable and breaks, typically when wave height reaches about 80 percent of the water depth.
How does wave celerity relate to tsunami propagation?
Tsunamis are an extreme example of shallow water waves because their wavelengths of 200 to 500 kilometers far exceed even the deepest ocean depths of about 4 kilometers. Therefore, tsunami celerity equals the square root of gravity times depth, giving speeds of approximately 200 meters per second or 720 kilometers per hour in the deep ocean. This is comparable to jet aircraft speed. As tsunamis approach shore and depth decreases, they slow down dramatically, causing the wave energy to compress into a shorter wavelength and much larger amplitude. In the deep ocean, tsunami amplitudes are typically less than one meter and are barely detectable, but they can grow to 10 or even 30 meters in shallow coastal waters. This depth-dependent celerity also causes tsunami wave crests to refract and focus energy on certain coastal features.
How do currents affect wave celerity?
Ocean currents modify wave celerity through a Doppler-like effect. A following current increases the apparent wave celerity and causes wavelengths to increase while wave heights decrease. An opposing current decreases wave celerity and causes wavelengths to shorten and wave heights to increase, potentially creating dangerous steep waves. When the opposing current speed reaches one quarter of the deep water wave celerity, waves can theoretically be blocked entirely, creating a condition known as wave blocking. This phenomenon occurs at river mouths, tidal inlets, and along the boundaries of strong currents like the Agulhas Current off South Africa, where opposing waves and currents create notorious hazards for shipping. Wave-current interaction must be accounted for in any realistic coastal wave model.