wavegenerating
Wavegenerating refers to the process of producing propagating waves by converting energy from a source into wave motion within a medium or through space. It spans several domains, including fluid dynamics, acoustics, and electromagnetism. In fluids, wave generation often occurs in laboratories with wave basins using wave makers such as movable paddles, flaps, or plungers to generate surface waves of controlled frequency, amplitude, and direction. The produced waves can be single-frequency monochromatic or follow predefined spectra to simulate real sea states. Wave generation must account for boundary conditions, damping, and nonlinearities.
In acoustics and ultrasonics, wave generation is achieved with transducers that convert electrical energy into mechanical
Control and synthesis: Modern wave generation often uses programmable signal generation, allowing arbitrary waveforms and spectral
Limitations and challenges include energy efficiency, dispersion, nonlinear effects at high amplitudes, and scaling between model