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  2. Shallow water drilling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shallow_water_drilling

    Shallow water drilling is the process of oil and gas exploration and production in less than 150 meters (500 feet) of water. [1] Shallow water drilling differs from deepwater drilling in several key aspects. Shallow water rigs have legs that reach the bottom of the sea floor and have blowout preventers (BOPs) above the surface of the water that ...

  3. Cnoidal wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cnoidal_wave

    Cnoidal wave solutions can appear in other applications than surface gravity waves as well, for instance to describe ion acoustic waves in plasma physics. [1] A cnoidal wave, characterised by sharper crests and flatter troughs than in a sine wave. For the shown case, the elliptic parameter is m = 0.9.

  4. Ursell number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ursell_number

    h : the mean water depth, and; λ : the wavelength, which has to be large compared to the depth, λ ≫ h. So the Ursell parameter U is the relative wave height H / h times the relative wavelength λ / h squared. For long waves (λ ≫ h) with small Ursell number, U ≪ 32 π 2 / 3 ≈ 100, [3] linear wave theory is applicable.

  5. Airy wave theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airy_wave_theory

    Visualization of deep and shallow water waves by relating wavelength to depth to bed. deep water – for a water depth larger than half the wavelength , h > ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠ λ , the phase speed of the waves is hardly influenced by depth (this is the case for most wind waves on the sea and ocean surface), [ 9 ]

  6. Dispersion (water waves) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispersion_(water_waves)

    In shallow water, the group velocity is equal to the shallow-water phase velocity. This is because shallow water waves are not dispersive. In deep water, the group velocity is equal to half the phase velocity: {{math|c g = ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠ c p. [7] The group velocity also turns out to be the energy transport velocity.

  7. Waves and shallow water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waves_and_shallow_water

    When waves travel into areas of shallow water, they begin to be affected by the ocean bottom. [1] The free orbital motion of the water is disrupted, and water particles in orbital motion no longer return to their original position. As the water becomes shallower, the swell becomes higher and steeper, ultimately assuming the familiar sharp ...

  8. List of oil fields - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_oil_fields

    This list of oil fields includes some major oil fields of the past and present. Countries by proven oil reserves 2017. The list is incomplete; there are more than 25,000 oil and gas fields of all sizes in the world. [1] However, 94 % of known oil is concentrated in fewer than 1,500 giant and major fields. [2]

  9. File:Byfield area map.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Byfield_area_map.pdf

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