Motions of Catamarans in Oblique Seas at Speed
2009
Motions, particularly roll, may have significant implications for passenger comfort when operating a catamaran in
oblique seas. Designers of high-speed catamarans therefore need tools for predicting a vessel's seakeeping performance.
This work presents three numerical methods for predicting vessel motions in oblique seas: a boundary-element method
combined with a strip-theory approach modified for multihulls, a two-dimensional Green function time-domain strip-theory
and a modified strip-theory method. Experiments to measure the motion response of a catamaran in oblique seas
were conducted using an NPL 5b model at three speeds (Fn = 0.203, 0.406 and 0.508). The experiments showed that all
motions tended to increase with increasing speed. Generally the boundary-element method and modified strip-theory
method correctly predicted responses in all of the experimental configurations. The two-dimensional Green function
time-domain strip-theory was used to predict the motions at the two higher speeds only and was also found, in general,
to predict the motions satisfactorily.
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