Till the very end of the twentieth century tsunami waves (or ‘waves in a harbour’, translated from Japanese) were considered an extremely rare and exotic natural p- nomenon, originating in the ocean and unexpectedly falling upon the seaside as gigantic waves. The 26th of December 2004, when tsunami waves wiped out, in a single day, more than 250,000 human lives, mourned in many countries, turned out to be a tragic date for all mankind. The authors of this book, who have studied tsunami waves for many years, - tended it to be a systematic exposition of modern ideas concerning • The mechanisms of tsunami wave generation • The peculiarities of tsunami wave propagation in the open ocean and of how waves run-up beaches • Methods for tsunami wave registration and the operation of a tsunami warning system • The mechanisms of other catastrophic processes in the ocean related to the se- mic activity of our planet The authors considered their main goal to be the creation of book prese- ing modern knowledge of tsunami waves and of other catastrophes in the ocean to scienti?c researchers and specialists in geophysics, oceanography, seismology, hydroacoustics, geology, geomorphology, civil and seaside engineering, postgr- uate students and students of relevant professions.
Author(s): Boris W. Levin, Mikhail a. Nosov
Edition: 2
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Year: 2015
Language: English
Pages: 404
Tags: Natural Hazards; Oceanography; Geophysics and Environmental Physics
Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
General Information on Tsunami Waves, Seaquakes, and Other Catastrophic Phenomena in the Ocean....Pages 1-34
Source of a Tsunami of Seismotectonic Origin....Pages 35-87
Hydrodynamic Processes at the Source of a Tsunami of Seismotectonic Origin: Incompressible Ocean....Pages 89-180
Role of the Compressibility of Water and of Nonlinear Effects in the Formation of Tsunami Waves....Pages 181-262
The Physics of Tsunami Formation by Sources of Nonseismic Origin....Pages 263-309
Propagation of a Tsunami in the Ocean and Its Interaction with the Coast....Pages 311-358
Methods of Tsunami Wave Registration....Pages 359-388