At 3:00 p.m. on The Pursuit of Lust 4 (2024)New Year's Day in 1995, work stopped on the deck of the Norwegian Draupner oil platform, which stood isolated out in the middle of the tempestuous North Sea. The wind had grown too strong, the waves roiled below, and it was no longer safe to be outside.
But one wave dwarfed the others. It measured 84-feet tall -- about two and a half times the height of a telephone pole -- and was thereafter named the "Draupner wave." Fortunately, the monstrous swell didn't reach the platform's deck.
The Draupner wave was the first scientific evidence of a rare rogue or freak wave, which is a wave that appears suddenly and measures at least twice as tall as the surrounding waves. These fleeting, colossal phenomena are thought to be possible culprits for the still-unexplained sinking of ships in the open ocean.
While there's still considerable uncertainty about how rogue waves form, a team of engineering scientists has successfully simulated a way that freak waves can suddenly rise from the sea. The researchers recreated a (smaller version) of a Draupner wave in a simulation pool, and published their research in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics.
"There’s a rather heated debate on the physical mechanisms of how these things form," Mark McAllister, a mechanical engineer at the University of Oxford and coauthor of the research, said. "We’ve shown the conditions that can support such a wave."
This simulation, achieved at The University of Edinburgh's 82-foot diameter test tank -- which is designed to create real ocean conditions -- proved that when a series of waves cross each other at large angles (around 120 degrees), a freak wave will form.
"It's an important piece of the puzzle," Günter Steinmeyer, a physicist at Germany's Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy who has researched rogue waves, said.
Still, he emphasized that there's still much we don't know about these little-seen waves, even over two decades after the famous Draupner event.
"Roughly 20 years later we firmly believe they exist but there are so many explanations around," said Steinmeyer, who had no role in the study. "They are so rare."
"If you ask three scientists in the field you will probably hear four different stories, and everybody is sure that all other explanations are completely wrong," he added.
To create a Draupner, the engineers spent about two days sending waves into one another at varying angles, until they found the right combination. The wave looked a lot like the famous woodblock print "The Great Wave of Kanagawa" from the early 1830s by artist Hokusai.
SEE ALSO: Antarctica’s once sleepy ice sheets have awoken. That's bad."The similarity to Hokusai’s Great Wave was purely coincidental, but a very nice surprise," Samuel Draycott, an engineer at The University of Edinburgh and a study coauthor, said over email.
"Only a few months later did I read theories that Hokusai’s great wave may actually depict a so-called rogue wave," Draycott added.
Freak waves have been reported in both the open ocean and near coastlines, Draycott said. Accordingly, understanding when a rogue wave might arise may help seafarers or people working at sea know when conditions are ripe for a rogue, such as two storms approaching from different angles.
"There are theories that say it’s random," said McAllister. "And others say that if you have specific conditions, the waves will grow in height."
Though, there's likely still a lot of chance at play with any rogue wave, noted Steinmeyer.
The weather conditions have to be right (perhaps stormy). Waves coming from different directions also have to collide at precisely the right time, and the right angle, just like they did beside the Draupner platform.
"Statistically, it’s a quite small number," said Steinmeyer. Though, he noted that some ship captains who have been at sea for decades have reported spotting huge Draupner waves.
The 1995 Draupner wave, at least, left the workers hunkered down amid the stormy North Sea, but unscathed.
"Luckily the platform was high enough so the wave didn’t hit the deck," said McAllister. "Had it been lower it could have been quite catastrophic."
Charmed, I’m Sure by Sadie SteinOur New Year’s Resolution: Travel More by Dan PiepenbringThe Morning Roundup for January 17, 2014Ice—It’s More Than Just Frozen Water! by Dan PiepenbringGot a strange text about your COVID vaccine? Here's what it could be.Art and Literature Are Teeming with Monsters, and Other NewsOur New Year’s Resolution: Spend More Time with the Kids by Dan PiepenbringApple releases iOS 16.6 with a bunch of security fixesGot a strange text about your COVID vaccine? Here's what it could be.Grindr employees are unionizingTwitter's and Twitter Blue's handles are now @x and @xblueTwitter's rebrand to X has its website looking like a messUsing the FCC Speed Test app could help close the digital divide'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for July 26Barbenheimer's box office weekend, in numbersGoogle is starting to roll out its Privacy SandboxAnthony Cudahy'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for July 24Punning on John UpdikeThe Morning Roundup for January 15, 2014 In news no one understands, Netflix just rolled out a feature like it's 1998 You can experience Obama's last speech live in 360 degrees Viceland's first scripted comedy series stars James Van Der Beek as Diplo Periscope could be your 24/7 personal trainer in 2017 Here's the first Periscope live 360 video taken underwater This Mannequin Challenge expertly shows the need for a Parkinson's cure LG's new 4K TV is thinner than an iPhone NASA to explore a metal asteroid that could be the core of a doomed planet LG's fancy smart fridge has Alexa and Amazon Fresh built right in Some people just don't understand the Jackie Evancho 'movement' Echo Fox signs 7 players to build largest fighting game roster in esports The latest co How to set a New Year's reading resolution that you'll accomplish This digestive tracker can help you control your farts Researchers bid farewell to 'Granny,' the world's oldest known orca Your iPhone could soon make it easier for you to text during movies Wendy's Twitter account still has (fresh, never frozen) beef with the world Donald Trump trusts WikiLeaks more than the CIA or FBI Mr. No Fun Paul Ryan shuts down kid who tries to dab 'Rogue One' reshoots changed more of the movie than we knew
2.3043s , 10132.21875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Pursuit of Lust 4 (2024)】,Warmth Information Network