JOURNAL ARTICLE

THE ORIGINS OF WATER WAVE THEORY

A. D. D. Craik

Year: 2003 Journal:   Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics Vol: 36 (1)Pages: 1-28   Publisher: Annual Reviews

Abstract

▪ Abstract After early work by Newton, the eighteenth and early nineteenth century French mathematicians Laplace, Lagrange, Poisson, and Cauchy made real theoretical advances in the linear theory of water waves; in Germany, Gerstner considered nonlinear waves, and the brothers Weber performed fine experiments. Later in Britain during 1837–1847, Russell, Green, Kelland, Airy, and Earnshaw all made substantial contributions, setting the scene for subsequent work by Stokes and others.

Keywords:
Physics Laplace transform Mathematical physics Mathematical analysis Mathematics

Metrics

271
Cited By
3.78
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
43
Refs
0.93
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Oceanography
Nonlinear Waves and Solitons
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Statistical and Nonlinear Physics
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Oceanography

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