\begin{table}%t2 \par \caption {\label{tab:nodeshifts}Shift of the antinodes ($i$) of the first 5 eigenmodes ($k$) when expanded linearly in the stratification parameter.} %\centerline { \begin{tabular}{c|ccccc}\hline\hline \multicolumn{6}{c}{Displacement:} \\ \hline %\hline $k i$ & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5\\ \hline 1 & 0 &&&&\\ 2 & --.020154 & 0.020154 &&&\\ 3 & --.024759 & 0 & 0.024759 &&\\ 4 & --.023445 & --.019519 & 0.019519 & 0.023445 &\\ 5 & --.021226 & --.028299 & 0 & 0.028299 & 0.021226\\ \hline \end{tabular}} %\centerline {\begin{tabular}{c|ccccc}\hline\hline \multicolumn{6}{c}{Compression:} \\ \hline $k i$ & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5\\ \hline 1 & 0 &&&&\\ 2 & --.0764 & 0.0764 &&&\\ 3 & --.0554 & 0 & 0.0554 &&\\ 4 & --.0418 & --.0271 & 0.0271 & 0.0418 &\\ 5 & --.0334 & --.0358 & 0 & 0.0358 & 0.0334\\ \hline \end{tabular}} \par \smallskip The numbers are the coefficients of $\alpha_1$ in the expansion. Note the number of digits in the table for the compression. The terms in summation~(\ref{eq:antinodesum}) decay rather slowly with~$j$ and although 200~terms were used to compute the above values, they are only valid up to the third significant digit. For the displacement the contributions decay much faster with~$j$ and are almost entirely determined by the $(k+2)$th contribution. \end{table}