Abstract

Field observations and numerical model predictions are used to investigate the effects of nonlinear interactions, reflection, and dissipation on the evolution of surface gravity waves propagating across a barred beach. Nonlinear interactions resulted in a doubling of the number of wave crests when moderately energetic (about 0.8‐m significant wave height), narrowband swell propagated without breaking across an 80‐m‐wide, nearly flat (2‐m depth) section of beach between a small offshore sand bar and a steep (slope = 0.1) beach face, where the waves finally broke. These nonlinear energy transfers are accurately predicted by a model based on the nondissipative, unidirectional (i.e., reflection is neglected) Boussinesq equations. For a lower‐energy (wave height about 0.4 m) bimodal wave field, high‐frequency seas dissipated in the surf zone, but lower‐frequency swell partially reflected from the steep beach face, resulting in significant cross‐shore modulation of swell energy. The combined effects of reflection from the beach face and dissipation across the sand bar and near the shoreline are described well by a bore propagation model based on the nondispersive nonlinear shallow water equations. Boussinesq model predictions on the flat section (where dissipation is weak) are improved by decomposing the wave field into seaward and shoreward propagating components. In more energetic (wave heights greater than 1 m) conditions, reflection is negligible, and the region of significant dissipation can extend well seaward of the sand bar. Differences between observed decreases in spectral levels and Boussinesq model predictions of nonlinear energy transfers are used to infer the spectrum of breaking wave induced dissipation between adjacent measurement locations. The inferred dissipation rates typically increase with increasing frequency and are comparable in magnitude to the nonlinear energy transfer rates.

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