Abstract:
We present experimental results about rising and decaying gravity
wave turbulence in a large laboratory flume. We consider the time evolution
of the wave energy spectral components in $\omega$- and $k$-domains and
demonstrate that emerging wave turbulence can be
characterized by two time scales – a short dynamical scale due to
nonlinear wave interactions and a longer kinetic time scale characterising
formation of a stationary wave energy spectrum.
In the decay regime we observed the maximum of the wave energy spectrum
decreasing in time initially as the power law, $\propto t^{-1/2}$, as
predicted by the weak turbulence theory, and then exponentially due to
viscous friction.