Abstract

The present study investigates the collision of two internal solitary waves with different initial amplitudes using a multi-domain boundary element method. It calculates and discusses wave profiles, residence time, and phase shifting. Observations reveal that tail waves are induced during the collision process, with the amplitude of the tail wave increasing as the initial amplitude of the internal solitary wave increases. Residence time, defined in terms of the interaction between waves of different initial amplitudes, decreases as wave amplitudes increase, eventually stabilizing at a constant value. Additionally, phase shifting increases with wave amplitude, with the rate of increase slowing down as the wave profile becomes relatively large.

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