Abstract

The execution of the so-called extinction tests represents the classical experimental method used to estimate the damping of an oscillatory system. For the specific case of ship roll motion, the roll decay tests are carried out at model-scale in a hydrodynamic basin. During these tests, the vessel is posed in an imbalance condition by an external moment and, after the release, the motion decays to the equilibrium condition. When the damping is far below the critical one, the transient decay is oscillatory. Here a new methodology is presented to determine the damping coefficients by fitting the roll decay curves directly, using a least-square fitting through a differential evolution algorithm of global optimisation. The results obtained with this methodology are compared with the predictions from standard methods. This kind of approach seems to be very promising when the motion model of the system under investigation is established with any level of non-linearities included. The usage of the fitting procedure on the approximate analytic solution of the differential equation of motion demonstrates the flexibility of the method. As a benchmark example, two experimentally measured roll extinction curves have been considered and suitably fitted. The newly predicted results, compared with the ones obtained from standard roll decay analysis, show that the algorithm is capable to perform a good regression on the experimental data.

Highlights

  • A ship which oscillates transversally on the free surface of the seaway is subject to the resistance of both water and air

  • Since the roll damping represents one of the most discussed subjects of ship hydrodynamics, the present paper investigates the short-cuts and the benefits of roll damping evaluation from free roll decay model tests [6, 7]

  • The results show that the process is capable to well reproduce the decay test, achieving a high coefficient of determination R2=0.9888

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Summary

Introduction

A ship which oscillates transversally (rolling) on the free surface of the seaway is subject to the resistance of both water and air. Application of standard analysis To evaluate the procedure used for evaluating the roll damping coefficients, two test cases were run taking into consideration two available decay tests from hydrodynamic basin.

Results
Conclusion

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