In this paper, we study the linear stability of a two-dimensional shear flow of an air layer overriding a water layer of finite depth. The air layer is considered to be of an infinite extent with an exponential velocity profile. Three different background conditions are considered in the finite-depth water layer: a quiescent background, a linear velocity profile and a quadratic velocity profile. It is known that the cases of the quiescent water layer and the linear velocity profile allow for analytical treatment. We further provide an analytical solution for the case of the quadratic velocity field: we specifically consider a flow-reversal profile, although the result could be generalized to other quadratic profiles as well. The role of water layer depth on the growth rate of the Miles and rippling instabilities is studied in each of the three cases. Using asymptotic analysis, with the air–water density ratio being a small parameter, we obtain an analytical expression for the growth rate of the Miles mode and discuss the condition for the existence of a long-wave cutoff for these profiles. We provide analytical expressions for the stability boundary in the parameter space of inverse squared Froude number and wavenumber. In scenarios where a long-wave cutoff does not exist, we have carried out a long-wave asymptotic study to obtain the growth rate behaviour in that regime.
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