The structure of the bow shock, V-wave, and the related wave drag and wake in
supercritical ambient flow are investigated for homogeneous hydrostatic single-layer
flow with a free surface over an isolated two-dimensional (i.e. h(x, y)) obstacle. The
two control parameters for this physical system are the ratio of obstacle height to
fluid depth and the Froude number F = U/√gH. Based on theoretical analysis and
numerical modelling, a steady-state regime diagram is constructed for supercritical
flow. This study suggests that supercritical flow may have an upstream bow shock
with a transition from the supercritical state to the subcritical state near the centreline,
and a V-shock in the lee without a state transition. Unlike subcritical flow, neither
a flank shock nor a normal lee shock is observed, due to the local supercritical
environment. Both the bow shock and V-shock are dissipative and reduce the Bernoulli
constant, but the vorticity generation is very weak in comparison with subcritical
ambient flow. Thus, in supercritical flow, wakes are weak and eddy shedding is
absent.
Formulae for V-wave shape and V-wave drag are given using linear theory. Both
formulae compare well with numerical model runs for small obstacles.
These results can be applied to air flow over mountains, river hydraulics and coastal
ocean currents with bottom topographies.