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Journal ArticleDOI

Streamwise streaks induced by bedload diffusion

25 Mar 2019-Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Cambridge University Press (CUP))-Vol. 863, pp 601-619
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors perturb a sediment bed with sinusoidal streaks, the crests of which are aligned with the flow, and find that when their wavelength is much larger than the flow depth, bedload diffusion brings mobile grains from troughs, where they are more numerous, to crests.
Abstract: A fluid flowing over a granular bed can move its superficial grains, and eventually deform it by erosion and deposition. This coupling generates a beautiful variety of patterns such as ripples, bars and streamwise streaks. Here, we investigate the latter, sometimes called "sand ridges" or "sand ribbons". We perturb a sediment bed with sinusoidal streaks, the crests of which are aligned with the flow. We find that, when their wavelength is much larger than the flow depth, bedload diffusion brings mobile grains from troughs, where they are more numerous, to crests. Surprisingly, gravity can only counter this destabilising mechanism when sediment transport is intense enough. Relaxing the long-wavelength approximation, we find that the cross-stream diffusion of momentum mitigates the influence of the bed perturbation on the flow, and even reverses it for short wavelengths. Viscosity thus opposes the diffusion of entrained grains to select the most unstable wavelength. This instability might turn single-thread alluvial rivers into braided channels.

Summary (2 min read)

1. Introduction

  • When water flows over a granular bed with enough strength, it dislodges some of the superficial grains and entrains them downstream (Shields 1936; Einstein 1937; Bagnold 1973).
  • The authors then consider a stream covered with a rigid lid, which might facilitate measurements in a laboratory experiment (section 4).
  • The authors now introduce the transport number, Tr, as the ratio of the two terms of the diffusivity in equation (2.12): Tr = γD `d θ0 − θt θ0 . (2.13) Combining this definition with the bedload transport law (equation (2.5)) recasts the transport number into a dimensionless sediment flux: Tr = γDd2s αvαn`dVs qs0 θ0 . (2.14) Literally,.
  • When the wavelength of the perturbation is much longer than the flow depth, the shallowwater approximation ensures that the latter condition is fulfilled.
  • The authors linear stability analysis then holds for imperceptible streaks only.

4. Rigid lid

  • The free surface of the flow makes the tracking of sediment grains difficult.
  • The authors are thus left with equation (2.17) again, that is, the same dispersion relation as in section 2.
  • Specifically, the authors replace the free-boundary condition with a no-slip one.
  • This result encourages us to look for the bedload instability in a closed channel, where their observation should be easier than in an open one—although, to their knowledge they have never been reported in any laboratory experiment.
  • This is a dramatic change: bedload diffusion and gravity now conspire to wear away even a long-wavelength perturbation.

5. Laboratory channels

  • Bedload experiments in laminar channels or pipes are not uncommon (Charru et al.
  • When the transport number is below one, the order of the most unstable mode increases with the aspect ratio of the channel.
  • Such a transient may not last long enough for the instability to grow.
  • Remembering that the roughness of the above estimates matches that of their simplified boundary conditions, the authors may now map the explored regions of the parameter space .
  • For the most part, they lie in the stable domain, although the experiments by Aussillous et al. (2013) and Seizilles et al. (2014) marginally overlap the stable domain on the first mode.

6. Conclusion

  • The linear stability analysis the authors have presented in this paper identifies a new instability associated with bedload transport, caused by the cross-stream diffusion of the travelling grains.
  • This instability produces bed streaks aligned with the flow, in the absence of any secondary currents.
  • The authors could not find any report of this instability appearing in a laboratory experiment.
  • This, of course, raises the question of its actual existence, but the authors suspect that the basic reason for its absence from the literature is that the aspect ratio of laboratory channels is usually too small to accommodate its growth.
  • O.D. was partially funded by the Émergence(s) programme of the Mairie de Paris.

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Streamwise streaks induced by bedload diusion
Anaïs Abramian, Olivier Devauchelle, Eric Lajeunesse
To cite this version:
Anaïs Abramian, Olivier Devauchelle, Eric Lajeunesse. Streamwise streaks induced by bedload dif-
fusion. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2019, 863, pp.601-619.
�10.1017/jfm.2018.1024�. �hal-02001689�

This draft was prepared using the LaTeX style file belonging to the Journal of Fluid Mechanics
1
Streamwise streaks induced by bedload
diffusion
Ana¨ıs Abramian
1
, Olivier Devauchelle
1
and Eric Lajeunesse
1
1
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, France
(Received xx; revised xx; accepted xx)
A fluid flowing over a granular bed can move its superficial grains, and eventually
deform it by erosion and deposition. This coupling generates a beautiful variety of
patterns such as ripples, bars and streamwise streaks. Here, we investigate the latter,
sometimes called “sand ridges” or “sand ribbons”. We perturb a sediment bed with
sinusoidal streaks, the crests of which are aligned with the flow. We find that, when
their wavelength is much larger than the flow depth, bedload diffusion brings mobile
grains from troughs, where they are more numerous, to crests. Surprisingly, gravity can
only counter this destabilising mechanism when sediment transport is intense enough.
Relaxing the long-wavelength approximation, we find that the cross-stream diffusion of
momentum mitigates the influence of the bed perturbation on the flow, and even reverses
it for short wavelengths. Viscosity thus opposes the diffusion of entrained grains to select
the most unstable wavelength. This instability might turn single-thread alluvial rivers
into braided channels.
Key words: Bedload transport, bedforms, pattern formation, river morphology, granular
diffusion.
1. Introduction
When water flows over a granular bed with enough strength, it dislodges some of the
superficial grains and entrains them downstream (Shields 1936; Einstein 1937; Bagnold
1973). As long as the flow-induced force is comparable to their weight, the entrained
grains remain close to the bed surface, where they travel with the flow, until they
eventually settle down. In steady state, the balance between entrainment and settling
sets the number of travelling grains, which thus depends primarily on the flow-induced
shear stress (Charru et al. 2004a; Lajeunesse et al. 2010). Accordingly, the sediment flux
resulting from their collective motion, called bedload transport, is usually expressed as
a function of shear stress (Meyer-Peter & M¨uller 1948).
Bedload transport is often heterogeneous—it scours away the bed somewhere, and
deposits the entrained material elsewhere (Exner 1925). The flow then adjusts to the
deformed bed, and alters the distribution of erosion and deposition. This fluid-structure
interaction generates bedforms through various instabilities (Seminara 2010; Charru et al.
2013).
Current ripples are iconic underwater bedforms found in streams, on beaches and
sometimes in the sedimentary record (Allen 1982; Coleman & Melville 1994). They result
from the inertia of the flow, which concentrates shear stress just upstream of their crest
Email address for correspondence: anaisabramian@gmail.com

2 A. Abramian, O. Devauchelle, and E. Lajeunesse
y
x
z
S
Flow
D
2h
Figure 1. Sediment bed perturbed by longitudinal streaks. A layer of fluid (blue) flows over
a granular bed (brown). The reference frame is inclined with respect to gravity (downstream
slope S). The vertical grey line with a diamond marker symbolises a plumb line.
(Kennedy 1963; Charru 2006; Charru et al. 2013). Nascent ripples make the most of this
mechanism by orienting their crest across the flow. At least initially, they do not involve
any cross-stream sediment flux. By contrast, the oblique crest of alternate bars diverts
the water flow to induce the cross-stream bedload flux that makes them unstable (Parker
1976; Colombini et al. 1987; Devauchelle et al. 2010; Andreotti et al. 2012).
Although less common, streamwise streaks materialise cross-stream bedload more
neatly—their crest remains aligned with the stream as they grow (Karcz 1967; Colombini
& Parker 1995; McLelland et al. 1999). To initiate a cross-stream flux of sediment, these
bedforms use a subtle peculiarity of turbulence. When streamwise ridges perturb their
boundary, turbulent flows generates transverse, counter-rotating vortices (Colombini
1993; Vanderwel & Ganapathisubramani 2015). Over a granular bed, these slow sec-
ondary currents transport sediment across the primary flow to accumulate it in upwelling
areas, thus reinforcing the ridges that brought them about. A similar phenomenon occurs
when grains of different sizes make up the bed, the heterogeneous roughness of which
then plays the role of ridges (McLelland et al. 1999; Willingham et al. 2014).
In the above examples, the sediment grains travel along the force that entrains them.
This is certainly true on average, but bedload particles slide and roll over a rough bed,
which makes their trajectory seesaw across the stream (Nikora et al. 2002; Furbish et al.
2012). The experiments of Seizilles et al. (2014) show that these fluctuations cause
the grains to disperse laterally, like random walkers. Collectively, they diffuse across
the bedload layer towards areas of lesser transport, thus moving across the stream in
the absence of transverse flow. We speculate that this Fickian diffusion could create
streamwise streaks without secondary currents, provided bedload is less intense on the
bedforms’ crests.
To test this scenario, we investigate the stability of a flat sediment bed sheared by a
laminar flow. We begin with the shallow-water approximation (section 2). Extending our
analysis to two dimensions, we then find that viscosity, which diffuses momentum across
the stream, selects the size of the most unstable mode (section 3). We then consider a
stream covered with a rigid lid, which might facilitate measurements in a laboratory
experiment (section 4). Finally, we look for this instability in previous experiments
(section 5).

Streamwise streaks 3
2. Bedload instability
2.1. Base state
We consider an infinitely wide, flat granular bed sheared by a free-surface, laminar
flow (figure 1). A small slope S drives the fluid along x, the streamwise direction, but we
will neglect its effect on the weight of a grain later on. We further assume that the size
of a grain, d
s
, is much smaller than the flow depth D. In steady state, the shear stress
the fluid exerts on the bed, τ, is the projection of its weight on the streamwise direction:
τ = ρgDS (2.1)
where ρ is the density of the fluid, and g the acceleration of gravity.
To entrain a grain, the fluid needs to pull it with enough strength to overcome its
weight. Mathematically, this happens when the ratio of these two forces, θ, exceeds a
threshold value, θ
t
. Shields (1936) defined this ratio as
θ =
τ
(ρ
s
ρ)gd
s
, (2.2)
where ρ
s
is the density of a grain.
Based on laboratory observations, Charru et al. (2004a) suggested that the number of
grains the fluid dislodges from the bed, per unit surface and time, is proportional to the
distance to threshold, θ θ
t
. The bedload layer is fed by this constant input. Conversely,
it loses a fraction of its population through settling. When moving grains are too sparse
to interact, the settling rate is proportional to the number of moving grains per unit
area, n (Aussillous et al. 2016). At equilibrium, the density of moving grains thus reads
n =
α
n
d
2
s
(θ θ
t
) (2.3)
where α
n
is, like θ
t
, a dimensionless, empirical parameter (Lajeunesse et al. 2010). For
illustration, θ
t
0.1 and α
n
0.01 are typical values for these parameters in a laminar
flow (Seizilles et al. 2014). Equation (2.3) is valid only above threshold, that is, when
θ > θ
t
; below threshold, the bedload layer is empty (n = 0).
After equation (2.3), a flow near threshold can only entrain a sparse bedload layer.
Then, the velocity of the travelling grains is that of the fluid near the bed, which is
proportional to shear stress in a laminar flow (Seizilles et al. 2014). As a consequence,
the average velocity in the bedload layer is proportional to Stokes’ settling velocity, which
reads
V
s
=
(ρ
s
ρ)gd
2
s
18η
(2.4)
where η is the viscosity of the fluid. The sediment flux, q
s
, results from the collective
motion of the bedload grains:
q
s
= α
v
nV
s
, (2.5)
where α
v
is a dimensionless coefficient. In a laminar flow, Seizilles et al. (2014) found
α
v
0.4.
Most authors relate bedload directly to the Shields parameter with a sediment trans-
port law (Meyer-Peter & M¨uller 1948). Combining equations (2.3) and (2.5), we find that
bedload transport is proportional to the distance to threshold. The specific expression
of this law, however, is still debated, and is likely to depend on the particle Reynolds
number (Ouriemi et al. 2009). Here, we choose a simple law that compares reasonably
with near-threshold, laminar experiments (Charru et al. 2004a; Seizilles et al. 2014).
Equations (2.1) to (2.5) represent a uniform base state, both in the downstream

4 A. Abramian, O. Devauchelle, and E. Lajeunesse
Bed
Free surface
z
y
x
a
Transverse coordinate, y
Sediment flux, q
x
b
Figure 2. Mechanism of the bedload instability. a: Bed elevation (brown) and free surface flow
(blue). b: Distribution of the corresponding downstream sediment flux. Red arrows indicate
bedload diffusion.
direction x and in the cross-stream direction y. In the following, we add a perturbation
to it to introduce bedload diffusion.
2.2. Bedload diffusion
Heterogeneity drives diffusion. To introduce some of it in our system, we now carve
streamwise streaks into the granular bed, in the form of a sinusoidal perturbation of
amplitude h and wavelength λ (figure 1). The fluid flow and the sediment bed remain
invariant along x, and our system is now two-dimensional.
To illustrate the mechanism of bedload instability, we consider, in this section, that
the amplitude of the perturbation is much smaller, and its wavelength much longer, than
the flow depth. With these assumptions, we expect the shallow-water approximation to
yield a reasonable estimate of the shear stress τ , and therefore of the Shields parameter
θ. Both are then proportional to the local flow depth, D h, and therefore of lesser
intensity at the crest of the perturbation. Mathematically,
θ =
ρDS
(ρ
s
ρ)d
s
1
h
D
. (2.6)
According to equation (2.3), the bedload layer is thus denser in the troughs than on the
crests. Its density reads
n = n
0
α
n
θ
0
d
2
s
h
D
(2.7)
where n
0
and θ
0
are the density of moving grains and the Shields parameter in the base
state, respectively. Like equation (2.3), from which it is derived, the above equation only
holds above threshold, that is, when
h
D
6
θ
0
θ
t
θ
0
. (2.8)
This condition sets the maximum amplitude the perturbation h can reach before the
following analysis breaks down.
Following Seizilles et al. (2014), we now treat the bedload grains as independent random
walkers. As they travel downstream at the average velocity α
v
V
s
, their cross-stream
velocity fluctuates around zero. We represent this process by a series of random sideways
steps, the amplitude of which is a fraction of the grain size. Statistically, the accumulation

Citations
More filters
01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this article, it has been shown that suspension by fluid turbulence of mineral solids larger than those of medium sands does not become appreciable until the bed shear stress is increased to a value exceeding 12 times its threshold value for the bed material considered.
Abstract: Owing to observational difficulties the distinction between a ‘suspended’ load of solids transported by a stream and a ‘ bed-load ’ has long remained undefined. Recently, however, certain critical experiments have thrown much light on the nature of bed-load transport. In particular, it has been shown that bed-load transport, by saltation, occurs in the absence of fluid turbulence and must therefore be due to a separate dynamic process from that of transport in suspension by the internal eddy motion of a turbulent fluid. It has been further shown that the forward motion of saltating solids is opposed by a frictional force of the same order as the immersed weight of the solids, the friction coefficient approximating to that given by the angle of slip. The maintenance of steady motion therefore requires a predictable rate of energy dissipation by the transporting fluid. The fluid thrust necessary to maintain the motion is shown to be exerted by virtue of a mean slip velocity which is predictable in the same way as, and approxim ates to, the terminal fall velocity of the solid. The mean thrust, and therefore the transport rate of saltating solids, are therefore predictable in terms of the fluid velocity close to the bed, at a distance from it, within the saltation zone, of a ‘centre of fluid thrust’ analogous to the ‘centre of pressure’. This velocity, which is not directly measurable in water streams, can be got from a knowledge of stream depth and mean flow velocity. Thus a basic energy equation is obtained relating the rate of transporting work done to available fluid transporting power. This is shown to be applicable to the transport both of wind-blown sand, and of water-driven solids of all sizes and larger than that of medium sand. Though the mean flow velocity is itself unpredictable, the total stream power, which is the product of this quantity times the bed shear stress, is readily measurable. But since the mean flow velocity is an increasing function of flow depth, the transport of solids expressed in terms of total stream power must decrease with increasing flow depth/grain size ratio. This considerable variation with flow depth has not been previously recognised. It explains the gross inconsistencies found in the existing experimental data. The theoretical variation is shown to approximate very closely to that found in recent critical experiments in which transport rates were measured at different constant flow depths. The theory, which is largely confirmed by these and other earlier experiments, indicates that suspension by fluid turbulence of mineral solids larger than those of medium sands does not become appreciable until the bed shear stress is increased to a value exceeding 12 times its threshold value for the bed material considered. This range of unsuspended transport decreases rapidly, however, as the grain size is reduced till, at a certain critical size, suspension should occur at the threshold of bed movement.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The emergence in the laboratory of a streamwise dissolution pattern at the surface of an initially flat soluble material, inclined and subjected to a thin runoff water flow is reported.
Abstract: The dissolution of rocks by rainfall commonly generates streamwise parallel channels, yet the occurrence of these natural patterns remains to be understood. Here, we report the emergence, in the laboratory, of a streamwise dissolution pattern at the surface of an initially flat soluble material, inclined and subjected to a thin runoff water flow. Nearly parallel grooves of width about one millimeter and directed along the main slope spontaneously form. Their width and depth increase continuously with time, until their crests emerge and channelize the flow. Our observations may constitute the early stage of the patterns observed in the field.

17 citations


Cites background from "Streamwise streaks induced by bedlo..."

  • ...At the surface of a granular bed, streamwise grooves can be generated by counterrotating vortices when the flow is turbulent [17,18] or by the diffusion-like transport of grains from the troughs to the crests of the bed in a laminar regime [19]....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work tracks particles in a laboratory flume to relate their statistical behavior to the self-organization of the granular bed they make up, and finds that as they travel downstream, the transported grains wander randomly across the bed's surface, thus inducing cross-stream diffusion.
Abstract: The coupling of sediment transport with the flow that drives it allows rivers to shape their own bed. Cross-stream fluxes of sediment play a crucial, yet poorly understood, role in this process. Here, we track particles in a laboratory flume to relate their statistical behavior to the self-organization of the granular bed they make up. As they travel downstream, the transported grains wander randomly across the bed's surface, thus inducing cross-stream diffusion. The balance of diffusion and gravity results in a peculiar Boltzmann distribution, in which the bed's roughness plays the role of thermal fluctuations, while its surface forms the potential well that confines the sediment flux.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore the factors governing river channel geometry, specifically how the threshold of sediment motion constrains the size and shape of channels and highlight the utility of the near-threshold channel model as a suitable framework to explain the average size and stability of river channels, and show how deviations relate to complex higher-order behaviors.
Abstract: The geometry of alluvial river channels both controls and adjusts to the flow of water and sediment within them. This feedback between flow and form modulates flood risk, and the impacts of climate and land-use change. Considering widely varying hydro-climates, sediment supply, geology and vegetation, it is surprising that rivers follow remarkably consistent hydraulic geometry scaling relations. In this Perspective, we explore the factors governing river channel geometry, specifically how the threshold of sediment motion constrains the size and shape of channels. We highlight the utility of the near-threshold channel model as a suitable framework to explain the average size and stability of river channels, and show how deviations relate to complex higher-order behaviours. Further characterization of the sediment transport threshold and channel adjustment timescales, coupled with probabilistic descriptions of river geometry, promise the development of future models capable of capturing rivers’ natural complexity. The size and shape of alluvial river channels control and adjust to the flow of water and sediment, with consequences for flooding and ecological habitat. This Perspective examines how the sediment entrainment threshold constrains the size, shape and dynamics of alluvial rivers.

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that, at equilibrium, the river shapes its channel so that the intensity of sediment transport follows a Boltzmann distribution, which selects a well-defined width over which the river transports sediment, while the sediment remains virtually idle on its banks.
Abstract: An alluvial river builds its own bed with the sediment it transports; its shape thus depends not only on its water discharge but also on the sediment supply. Here we investigate the influence of the latter in laboratory experiments. We find that, as their natural counterpart, laboratory rivers widen to accommodate an increase of sediment supply. By tracking individual particles as they travel downstream, we show that, at equilibrium, the river shapes its channel so that the intensity of sediment transport follows a Boltzmann distribution. This mechanism selects a well-defined width over which the river transports sediment, while the sediment remains virtually idle on its banks. For lack of a comprehensive theory, we represent this behavior with a single-parameter empirical model which accords with our observations.

7 citations

References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of gravity on the incipient motion and the bedload transport of sediment is investigated. But the authors focus on the critical bed-shear stress, which is defined to assess the movement of sediment in the direction of the resultant force.
Abstract: The paper presents a study on the influence of gravity on the incipient motion and the bed-load transport of sediment. The computation of critical bed-shear stress is revisited considering the balance of forces (hydrodynamic forces and submerged self-weight) acting on a solitary sediment particle lying on an arbitrary sloping bed. Modified effective bed-shear stress and the corresponding critical bed-shear stress, which are defined to assess the incipient motion of sediment in the direction of resultant force, are applied for the estimation of bed-load transport rate in the direction of resultant force. The sediment transport induced by the gravitational force, which is oblique to the direction of the drag force induced by flow, is incorporated into the bed-load transport equation. This modified model provides a reasonable prediction of the critical bed-shear stress and the bed-load transport rate. The model is validated by experimental data. It can be applied to steep slopes and can also avoid the problem of singularity that arises in numerically calculation of sediment transport rate. Additionally, the vectorial transport rate obtained in the model calculation can be implemented in a numerical simulation of channel bed evolution.

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

5 citations


"Streamwise streaks induced by bedlo..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...Based on the wind-tunnel measurements of Yamasaka et al. (1987), we use the range 0.1–1....

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (23)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Streamwise streaks induced by bedload diffusion" ?

Abramian et al. this paper studied the effect of shear stress on sediment motes in a stream. 

The authors speculate that this might not be fortuitous, as experimenters often wish the sediment bed to be invariant in the cross-stream direction. At this point, the authors can only imagine an ideal set-up, specially designed to observe the bedload instability. Once such a framework is set, it will become a matter of numerical routines to explore it beyond linearity. 

Stokes flowBedload diffusion reinforces streamwise streaks provided (i) bedload transport is weak, and (ii) the flow exerts a lower shear stress on the crests than in the troughs. 

As long as the flow-induced force is comparable to their weight, the entrained grains remain close to the bed surface, where they travel with the flow, until they eventually settle down. 

In steady state, the shear stress the fluid exerts on the bed, τ , is the projection of its weight on the streamwise direction:τ = ρgDS (2.1)where ρ is the density of the fluid, and g the acceleration of gravity. 

The bedload instability is sensitive to boundary conditions; it persists in a rectangular pipe, but disappears when the flow is driven by a travelling lid. 

Once the perturbation has outgrown hmax, the instability enters a nonlinear regime, to which the present analysis grants no access. 

Over a granular bed, these slow secondary currents transport sediment across the primary flow to accumulate it in upwelling areas, thus reinforcing the ridges that brought them about. 

The bedload density equation (2.7), the cross-stream flux equations (2.9) and (2.10), and the the Exner equation form a closed system, which the slope-induced flux makes nonlinear. 

they diffuse across the bedload layer towards areas of lesser transport, thus moving across the stream in the absence of transverse flow. 

Because it can only grow near the threshold of sediment transport, the unstable perturbation quickly enters a nonlinear regime which the authors havenot investigated. 

When water flows over a granular bed with enough strength, it dislodges some of the superficial grains and entrains them downstream (Shields 1936; Einstein 1937; Bagnold 1973). 

Although most bedload experiments involve open channels, the free surface of the flow makes the tracking of sediment grains difficult. 

while the stabilising mechanism vanishes, the unstable coupling between the flow and the bed persists—the bedload instability then thrives. 

In addition, the parameter γ, which accounts for the gravityinduced flux of sediment, has never been measured in a laminar flow (section 2.3). 

In steady state, the balance between entrainment and settling sets the number of travelling grains, which thus depends primarily on the flow-induced shear stress (Charru et al. 2004a; Lajeunesse et al. 2010). 

The pipe should be wider than the wavelength of the perturbation; an aspect ratio of approximately 20, for instance, should allow two parallel streaks to grow. 

of course, raises the question of its actual existence, but the authors suspect that the basic reason for its absence from the literature is that the aspect ratio of laboratory channels is usually too small to accommodate its growth. 

A reliable theory of bedload diffusion, tested against laboratory experiments, would therefore help us understand their morphology. 

To identify the bedload instability unambiguously, one need only reduce the bedload flux until the wavelength of the instability reaches its minimum, which should be the above value. 

Re ( ĥ exp ( ikyD))) , (4.6)thus confirming that, regardless of the wavenumber k, the shear stress is always stronger at the crest. 

The linear stability analysis the authors have presented in this paper identifies a new instability associated with bedload transport, caused by the cross-stream diffusion of the travelling grains. 

the accumulationof these steps generates a diffusive flux, qd, towards the less populated areas of the bedload layer.