Abstract

AbstractBedforms emerge in a variety of shapes and sizes when a granular erodible surface is subject to a strong enough shear flow, as observed in topographic data from submarine canyons, rivers, deserts, and planetary bodies. The two salient features of bedforms are the ability to collectively transport particles, and to generate form drag thus increasing flow resistance. These two mechanisms are in competition and contribute to force bedforms of increasing size migrating more slowly. In a dedicated large‐scale open channel flow facility, hierarchies of fluvial bedforms were generated and measured in equilibrium conditions. The corresponding scale‐dependent migration velocity and mass flux contributions were quantified in the wave number and frequency domains. Experimental results are paired with a validated set of theoretical models to demonstrate that ripples or dunes reach an equilibrium state when drag partitioning ensures high enough frictional drag to sustain the bedload transport of sediment, and low enough form drag to enable the migration of the largest bedform size. This mechanism is inferred to constrain the growth of bedforms when sediment supply is not the limiting factor.

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