2024 Faculty Courses School of Environment and Society Undergraduate major in Civil and Environmental Engineering
Coastal Engineering and Oceanography
- Academic unit or major
- Undergraduate major in Civil and Environmental Engineering
- Instructor(s)
- Takashi Nakamura / / Shinjiro Kanae
- Class Format
- Lecture (Face-to-face)
- Media-enhanced courses
- -
- Day of week/Period
(Classrooms) - 5-6 Thu
- Class
- -
- Course Code
- CVE.B310
- Number of credits
- 100
- Course offered
- 2024
- Offered quarter
- 2Q
- Syllabus updated
- Mar 14, 2025
- Language
- Japanese
Syllabus
Course overview and goals
Oceans are, along with space, one of the great frontiers of the human race. Recently, it has been noticed that the ocean plays a key role in the processes of water/heat balance and material cycles in the geosphere-hydrosphere-atmosphere related to global environmental problems such as global warming. The coastal area is a connecting area between ocean and land, and experiences higher human activity. In our country, buildings and roads have been extended to near the shoreline because the inhabitable area is small and limited, and the coastal area is facing dangers from high waves and high tide due to typhoons, tsunamis, etc. Therefore, how to protect the hinterland from these disasters has been a large issue. Tsunami damage due to the Great East Japan Earthquake in Mar. 2011 is obvious proof of how serious the issue is. Moreover, rising sea-levels, larger typhoons, etc. due to global warming are expected. Thus, these are becoming additional issues. The coastal area is also characterized as an area of higher primary production and biodiversity. However, the area is affected by many kinds of environmental loads because of a connecting area between land and ocean. In fact, wide scale degradation of important ecosystems, such as the tidal flat, seagrass/seaweed, coral reef ecosystems, etc., are progressing. Therefore, a suitable conservation plan and action are required.
Coast/ocean have some different phenomena from open channels or pipe flows learned in hydraulics. Wave phenomena such as “wind wave”, “swell”, “tide”, “tsunami”, etc. are good examples of the specific characteristics. Several types of current phenomena, such as “ocean current”, “tidal current”, “wind induced current”, “nearshore current” also exist, and hydrokinetics in the coast/ocean remain complex and highly varied. The background mechanics of the phenomena are much different from channel/pipe flows acting as a simple unidirectional flow induced by gravity and a pressure gradient. In this course, the instructor explains the basic theories for various types of waves and currents in coastal areas with their physical processes, and issues of wave forces on coastal structures and nearshore sediment transport, which are important for coastal engineering. Moreover, the instructor explains important aspects of coastal environmental problems, and the outlines of future coastal ecosystem conservation are discussed.
Course description and aims
By the end of this class, students will be able to:
1) understand the basic theories on various types of waves and currents in coastal areas with their physical processes,
2) understand mechanisms and quantitative evaluation methods of nearshore sediment transport with their control methods,
3) understand the important aspects of coastal environmental problems and the points for the coastal ecosystem conservation,
Keywords
Water wave dynamics, tides, storm surge, tsunami, tidal & ocean currents, littoral drift & beach deformation, coastal environmental problems
Competencies
- Specialist skills
- Intercultural skills
- Communication skills
- Critical thinking skills
- Practical and/or problem-solving skills
Class flow
Guidance on the course plan will be given at the first lecture. The presentation material for each lecture will be uploaded onto T2SCHOLA before the lecture. Brief tests will be conducted at some lectures. In addition to the 6 lectures, if possible, students will visit the Port and Airport Research Institute (PARI).
Course schedule/Objectives
Course schedule | Objectives | |
---|---|---|
Class 1 | Introduction, Basic theory on water waves | Examples to show importance of coastal disaster prevention and environmental conservation issues will be given with a guidance on the lecture plan. Students will learn about basic characteristics of water waves as a kind of interfacial waves. |
Class 2 | Nearshore wave deformation (wave shoaling, refraction, diffraction, reflection and breaking) | To learn the mechanism and quantitative evaluation methods on nearshore wave deformation. |
Class 3 | Tidal waves, storm surge, Tsunami, Tidal currents, ocean currents, and wind-induced currents | To learn generation mechanism on tides, storm surge, Tsunami, tidal & ocean currents, and wind-induced currents |
Class 4 | Coastal environmental system and its numerical simulation | To understand the basics of numerical simulation techniques for reproducing and predicting the coastal environment |
Class 5 | Mechanism of coastal sediment transport (littoral drift) and siltation including nearshore currents | To learn generation mechanism and characteristics of nearshore currents and sediment transport |
Class 6 | Budget of littoral drift and nearshore deformation, Countermeasures and control of beach deformation | To learn mechanism of beach deformation in terms of the budget of littoral drift and countermeasures of beach deformation |
Class 7 | Visit to Port and Airport Research Institute (PARI) | To visit Port and Airport Research Institute (PARI) and submit a report on the visit |
Study advice (preparation and review)
To enhance effective learning, students are encouraged to spend approximately 100 minutes preparing for class and another 100 minutes reviewing class content afterwards (including assignments) for each class.
They should do so by referring to textbooks and other course material.
Textbook(s)
Nothing
Reference books, course materials, etc.
Horikawa, Kiyoshi. “Coastal Engineering”. University of Tokyo Press, ISBN-13: 978-4130611084 (in Japanese, original title translated)
Unoki, Sanae; Kubota, Masahisa. “Wave and Currents in the Ocean”. Tokai University Press, ISBN-13: 978-4486013808 (in Japanese)
Kuriyama, Yoshiaki. “Beach Dynamics -Monitoring, Prediction, and Countermeasures”. Gihodo Shuppan, ISBN-13: 978-4486013808 (in Japanese, original title translated)
Evaluation methods and criteria
Learning achievement is evaluated by combining results from brief tests 85 %, and report about PARI visit 15 %.
Related courses
- ZUT.B202 : Hydraulics I
Prerequisites
Nothing
Other
The schedule of PARI's visit will be later determined.