A fact from Stokes drift appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 25 January 2008, and was viewed approximately 892 times (disclaimer) (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that for a pure wave motion in fluid dynamics, the Stokes drift velocity is the average velocity when following a specific fluid parcel as it travels with the fluid flow?
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Note that the Stokes drift in Falkovich' example of 1D flow has an exact solution. In this case, the Eulerian velocity is taken as – where instead of the sine as used by Falkovich, the cosine is used because of symmetry conditions of at and Now the Lagrangian parcel position is denoted as with the position label taken equal to The position is the solution of:
The additional condition on is that at the Stokes drift is equal to zero, i.e. that the spatial mean value of the oscillation is zero:
Then the progressive wave solution is:
where
with the round function denoting rounding to the nearest integer.
It can directly be observed that the Lagrangian moving parcel experiences a different (lower) frequency than the Eulerian velocity frequency The Stokes drift velocity is simply the difference in positions after one Lagrangian wave period has passed, divided by the Lagrangian wave period. So the exact expression for the Stokes drift velocity is:
It has the Taylor expansion:
in agreement with Falkovich' perturbation solution. Which is in this case – with a cosine for the velocity field, :