Search Results for: Mechanics Of Coastal Sediment Transport 3 Advanced Series On Ocean Engineering
Mechanics of Coastal Sediment Transport
Author: J?rgen Freds?e
Publisher: Springer Science & Business
ISBN: 9810208413
Category: Science
Page: 369
View: 925
Download NowLanguage: en
Pages: 369
Pages: 369
This book treats the subject of sediment transport in the marine environment, covering transport of non-cohesive sediment by waves and current in- and outside the surf zone. The primary aim of the book is to describe the physical processes of sediment transport and how to represent them in mathematical models.
Language: en
Pages: 369
Pages: 369
This book treats the subject of sediment transport in the marine environment, covering transport of non-cohesive sediment by waves and current in- and outside the surf zone. It can be read independently, but a background in hydraulics and basic wave mechanics is required. It is intended for M.Sc. and Ph.D.
Language: en
Pages: 231
Pages: 231
The Coastal Inlets Research Program (CIRP) is developing predictive numerical models for simulating the waves, currents, sediment transport, and morphology change at and around coastal inlets. Water motion at a coastal inlet is a combination of quasi-steady currents such as river flow, tidal current, wind-generated current, and seiching, and of
Language: en
Pages: 2768
Pages: 2768
This proceedings contains nearly 200 papers on cutting-edge research presented at the seventh international Symposium on Coastal Engineering and Science of Coastal Sediment Processes, held May 2-6, 2011, in Miami, Florida, USA. This technical specialty conference was devoted to promoting an interdisciplinary exchange of state-of-the-art knowledge among researchers in the
Language: en
Pages: 818
Pages: 818
The 7th International Conference on Scour and Erosion (ICSE 2014) was organised by the School of Civil, Environmental and Mining Engineering and the Centre for Offshore Foundation Systems at the University of Western Australia under the guidance of the Technical Committee 213 for Scour and Erosion of the International Society