If you're in Amsterdam, and have a little free time, I highly recommend the Normaal Amsterdams Peil visitor center in the City Hall.[0] There are large sight gauges, showing the water level at various points in the canal system. It gives a great sense of how far below the North Sea surface you may be.
That's nice. Devils Lake ND went with a little blue wave sign attached to the street lights to tell you how high the lake level is. It does make a person very mindful of what happens if the dike breaks.
You can see that the reflected waves have a big impact on the shape of the incoming waves as soon as the first of them reach the far end. I'm no hydrologist but it seems to me that the shape of the trough concentrates this effect in a way that would not happen in a more natural open environment like a shore or dike. I suppose they can account for this in their experiments. Very cool machine in any case. I love large-scale experimentation like this.
We have a wave generator at my old university, nothing to that scale, but it it had an array of paddles on one edge of a cube, and you could generate different shapes of wave. Like a CNC wave generator. You could even generate a swirling vortex. It was a pretty cool thing. We tested robots and offshore energy harvestors.
Largest I can think of are waves produced by underwater nuclear tests. Wikipedia claims the Operation Crossroads test produced 29m high waves, and that was only 23kt yield.
yeah. I dont understand what they are basing this on. Largest for testing purposes maybe? There are certainly larger wave machines (thrill rides, wave pools, etc..).
Here is a good video that shows how the (older) delta flume was used in the application of developing "living shorelines", as noted at the bottom of the article:
That is super cool. I would love to know though how long the willow branch mattress would last though before vegetation growing on it would also help it rot, get water logged and sink.
Would one also want to include the drum based floats underneath to help keep it above water?
It would be interesting to see these made and just placed out in various areas to grow, like little artificial islands or marsh patches. It would also be a boon to the willow stick industry :-) (any idea why they picked willow branches aside from the fact that the willow just grows a boat-load of vine-y sticks?) (pun intended)
[0] http://www.normaalamsterdamspeil.nl/en/