Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain

The paper deals with the conformal mapping of finite, plane, simply connected domains, representing oceans, lakes, estuaries, bays, lagoons, and other natural water bodies of this kind. As a rule, they are bounded by geometrically complex shorelines. The partial differential problems investigated i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: W³odzimierz J. Prosnak, Pawe³ P. Cze¶nik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2001-06-01
Series:Oceanologia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/43_2.html#A1
id doaj-7d9a5fca412f4f5994d5fd42030209bb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7d9a5fca412f4f5994d5fd42030209bb2020-11-24T21:07:54ZengElsevierOceanologia0078-32342001-06-01432169200Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domainW³odzimierz J. ProsnakPawe³ P. Cze¶nikThe paper deals with the conformal mapping of finite, plane, simply connected domains, representing oceans, lakes, estuaries, bays, lagoons, and other natural water bodies of this kind. As a rule, they are bounded by geometrically complex shorelines. The partial differential problems investigated in Oceanology and posed in such domains have turned out to be difficult to solve for at least three reasons. They follow on from the mathematical properties of the differential equations governing such problems, from the just-mentioned geometrical complexity of the domains of solution, and from the sensitivity of the solutions to boundary conditions. <br> In view of the last reason the contours admitted as boundaries of the domains of the solution ought to be as close to the real shorelines as possible. The obviously inaccurate approximation of the shorelines by "staircases", which appears rather often (cf. Catewicz & Jankowski 1983, Lin & Chandler-Wilde 1996) as a consequence of applying finite difference methods to the solution of the partial differential problems, raises serious doubts from the point of view of Numerical Fluid Mechanics. <br> It is recalled in the paper that such inaccuracies are not unavoidable: that complicated plane domains can be transformed accurately by means of properly applied <i>conformal mapping</i> onto regular, canonical domains - in particular, onto discs or squares. Such a transformation is demonstrated on the rather difficult example of the Vistula Lagoon. The transformation begins with the decomposition of the domain into five plane subdomains, each one of which is eventually transformed onto a disc. Every such result is arrived at quite independently of the remaining subdomains, by means of a set of properly selected consecutive mappings. Hence, the final <i>canonical</i> domain consists in this case of a system of five discs which, however, within the framework of this differential problem, have to be treated as <i>interconnected</i>. The interconnections involve images of four segments of straight lines, separating the original subdomains. <br> The transformations and the resulting canonical domain presented in the paper are intended to be applied to the solution of certain hydrodynamical problems concerning the Vistula Lagoon, which will be published elsewhere.http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/43_2.html#A1ShorelineTransformation of coordinatesConformal mappingHolomorphic functionDomain of solutionCircular domainComputational domainBoundary conditionsInversionSchwarz-Christoffel functionInverse of a function
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author W³odzimierz J. Prosnak
Pawe³ P. Cze¶nik
spellingShingle W³odzimierz J. Prosnak
Pawe³ P. Cze¶nik
Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain
Oceanologia
Shoreline
Transformation of coordinates
Conformal mapping
Holomorphic function
Domain of solution
Circular domain
Computational domain
Boundary conditions
Inversion
Schwarz-Christoffel function
Inverse of a function
author_facet W³odzimierz J. Prosnak
Pawe³ P. Cze¶nik
author_sort W³odzimierz J. Prosnak
title Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain
title_short Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain
title_full Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain
title_fullStr Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain
title_full_unstemmed Transformation of the Vistula Lagoon onto a canonical domain
title_sort transformation of the vistula lagoon onto a canonical domain
publisher Elsevier
series Oceanologia
issn 0078-3234
publishDate 2001-06-01
description The paper deals with the conformal mapping of finite, plane, simply connected domains, representing oceans, lakes, estuaries, bays, lagoons, and other natural water bodies of this kind. As a rule, they are bounded by geometrically complex shorelines. The partial differential problems investigated in Oceanology and posed in such domains have turned out to be difficult to solve for at least three reasons. They follow on from the mathematical properties of the differential equations governing such problems, from the just-mentioned geometrical complexity of the domains of solution, and from the sensitivity of the solutions to boundary conditions. <br> In view of the last reason the contours admitted as boundaries of the domains of the solution ought to be as close to the real shorelines as possible. The obviously inaccurate approximation of the shorelines by "staircases", which appears rather often (cf. Catewicz & Jankowski 1983, Lin & Chandler-Wilde 1996) as a consequence of applying finite difference methods to the solution of the partial differential problems, raises serious doubts from the point of view of Numerical Fluid Mechanics. <br> It is recalled in the paper that such inaccuracies are not unavoidable: that complicated plane domains can be transformed accurately by means of properly applied <i>conformal mapping</i> onto regular, canonical domains - in particular, onto discs or squares. Such a transformation is demonstrated on the rather difficult example of the Vistula Lagoon. The transformation begins with the decomposition of the domain into five plane subdomains, each one of which is eventually transformed onto a disc. Every such result is arrived at quite independently of the remaining subdomains, by means of a set of properly selected consecutive mappings. Hence, the final <i>canonical</i> domain consists in this case of a system of five discs which, however, within the framework of this differential problem, have to be treated as <i>interconnected</i>. The interconnections involve images of four segments of straight lines, separating the original subdomains. <br> The transformations and the resulting canonical domain presented in the paper are intended to be applied to the solution of certain hydrodynamical problems concerning the Vistula Lagoon, which will be published elsewhere.
topic Shoreline
Transformation of coordinates
Conformal mapping
Holomorphic function
Domain of solution
Circular domain
Computational domain
Boundary conditions
Inversion
Schwarz-Christoffel function
Inverse of a function
url http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/43_2.html#A1
work_keys_str_mv AT w3odzimierzjprosnak transformationofthevistulalagoonontoacanonicaldomain
AT pawe3pczenik transformationofthevistulalagoonontoacanonicaldomain
_version_ 1716761618954584064