1. A Book, A Stamp, and a Question
A few weeks ago, I borrowed an old coastal engineering text book from the Colombo Public Library:
“Beaches and Coasts” – Cuchlaine A. M. King (1959)
Stamped:
- 📅 20 July 1961
- 📍 Donated by Lanka Salt Ltd
Within just two years, this book had travelled from London to Colombo—without digital systems, without internet, yet with remarkable efficiency.
But what caught my attention was not only the history—it was a formula inside the book, one we still use today in coastal engineering.
That formula describes how waves move.
And it emerges from one of the most beautiful derivations in fluid mechanics.
2. The Formula Observed in the Book
The book presents:
General wave velocity:
Deep water simplification:
And the famous engineering relation:
At first glance, these look empirical.
They are not.
They come directly from differential equations governing fluid motion.
3. Step 1 — Governing Equation (Laplace Equation)
We begin with ideal assumptions:
- Inviscid fluid (no viscosity)
- Irrotational flow
- Small-amplitude waves (linear theory)
Under these, velocity can be expressed using a potential function :
This leads to the governing equation:
This is Laplace’s equation.
👉 This is the foundation of linear wave theory.
4. Step 2 — Boundary Conditions
To solve Laplace’s equation, we impose physical constraints:
(a) Free Surface — Kinematic Condition
The surface moves with the fluid:
(b) Free Surface — Dynamic Condition
From Bernoulli’s equation (linearized):
(c) Seabed Condition
No vertical flow through seabed:
5. Step 3 — Assume a Wave Solution
We assume a harmonic wave form:
Where:
- (wave number)
- (angular frequency)
6. Step 4 — Apply Boundary Conditions
Substituting into the free surface conditions and eliminating , we obtain:
🔑 This is the dispersion relation
This equation connects:
- Frequency
- Wave number
- Water depth
It is the core of all coastal wave modelling.
7. Step 5 — Deriving Wave Velocity
Wave celerity:
Substitute dispersion relation:
Now replace:
We obtain:
✔ This is exactly the formula printed in the 1959 book.
8. Step 6 — Deep Water Approximation
When:
Then:
So:
9. Step 7 — Deriving the Practical Engineering Formula
Using:
Equate:
Solve for :
Convert numerically:
- In meters:
- In feet:
✔ This is the exact number printed in your book.
10. Physical Interpretation (Important for Learners)
This equation tells us:
- Waves are dispersive
- Longer waves travel faster
- Depth controls wave behaviour through tanh(kh)
Regimes:
| Condition | Behaviour |
|---|---|
| Deep water | Wave speed depends on wavelength |
| Shallow water | Speed depends on depth only |
| Intermediate | Both effects combined |
11. Why This Still Matters Today
This same equation is embedded in:
- SWAN
- Delft3D
- MIKE 21
- Offshore design codes (ISO 19901)
👉 What has changed is not the physics
👉 Only the computational scale
12. Final Reflection
A book printed in 1959, stamped in Colombo in 1961, already contained:
- The full mathematical structure
- The governing physics
- The engineering approximations
The equations we rely on today were already complete decades ago.
What we inherit is not just knowledge.
It is compressed intellectual history.
Sometimes, an old library book is not outdated.
It is a wave still travelling through time.



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