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Sumatra Tsunami
On 26th December 2004 off the coast of
Northern Sumatra, the fourth largest earthquake this century occurred
at 00:58 UTC. The quake occurred at 10 km depth, and was measured to
9.0 on the open ended Richter scale. A displacement of the tectonic
plates will always generate a wave at the surface of the ocean - a so-called
Tsunami. In this case, the tectonic plates are estimated to have been
displaced as much as 30 metres - thus, the energy released is
equivalent to 10.000 Hiroshima atomic bombs. The location of the
earthquake and the aftershocks are shown in the image below (by
courtesy of USGS).
As
the Tsunamis travel across the open oceans, the amplitude of the wave
of only a few centimetres is hardly noticeable. However, as they
approach shore they will gradually build up and in areas where the
topography of the seabed is especially suited they will reach heights
of 10+ metres. Combined with the speed at which the Tsunamis travel of
up to 800 km/h (500 mph) over the open ocean, slowing to 30-100 km/h
as they reach shore, they can cause extensive damage as they have
tragically done in the countries surrounding the Indian Ocean.
DHI has attempted to simulate the
phenomenon using operational global 2D model (MIKE 21). A simulation
has been run to illustrate this remarkable natural phenomenon. Because
shoaling effects are what make the Tsunamis extreme, detailed
information of the coastline is essential. With the flexible mesh
version of the MIKE 21 model we are able to zoom in to a few locations
where the Tsunamis have had the most devastating impacts.
Preliminary Model Results
A coarse resolution model has been run
immediately following the event with the information available at the
time, and without the detailed coastal information. The results from
this model illustrate how the Tsunami propagates across the Indian
ocean and how it builds up on the coast, however the build-up is
grossly underestimated in this set-up. The model is run without tide
or wind, so it is the pure signal from the Tsunami.

An animation of the
wave propagation across the Indian Ocean can be downloaded by clicking the
image on the left (1.5 MB)
Local Effects
From the electronic navigational charts available for the area, more
detailed topographies have been applied to the waters around Sri
Lanka, the west coast of Thailand and Malaysia. Below are animations
of the zoom-in on these areas. Yet the topography is too coarse to get
the full devastating effect of the wave, it is evident how the effects
can vary from one location to another depending on the local funnel
effect of the bathymetry.

A zoom into one of the
badly affected areas around Phuket, Thailand can be downloaded by
clicking the image on the left.
(2.6 MB)

A bit further into the
Melaka Strait in Malaysia - can be downloaded by clicking the image on
the left
(0.5 MB)

And finally around
Sri-Lanka
(0.4 MB)
If you are interested in the modelling
aspects of this simulation, or are interested in different outputs,
please feel free to contact
us.
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