Observations of swell influence on ocean surface roughness
نویسنده
چکیده
[1] Field measurements of the ocean surface wave spectrum focusing on the slope-contributing components are used to construct a spectral model of the ocean surface roughness. The spectral parameterization is established with the observed empirical power law relation between the dimensionless wave spectral density and wind speed. The power law parameters (proportionality coefficient and exponent) are shown to be modified by swell. Discussions are presented on the swell effects of spectral properties, including their wind speed dependence and swell modification of roughness components characterizing Bragg resonance and surface tilting in radar application. Several notable results include the following: (1) With increasing swell intensity, the spectral density increases in the long-wave portion and decreases in the short-wave portion of the intermediate-scale waves. (2) There is a nodal point with respect to swell impact in the wave number dependence of the coefficient and exponent of the spectral parameterization function in the vicinity of wave number near 3 rad/m, suggesting that waves about a couple of meters long are insensitive to swell influence. (3) Spectral density in the decimeter length scale becomes less sensitive to wind speed variation as swell intensity increases. (4) Increasing swell influence shifts wave breaking toward shorter and broader scales.
منابع مشابه
Breaking wave contribution to low grazing angle radar backscatter from the ocean surface
[1] The anomaly of radar sea spikes, defined here as the non-Bragg scattering events with backscattering cross-section of horizontal polarization exceeding that of the vertical polarization, has been associated with steep wave features possibly going through wavebreaking process, with or without whitecap manifestation. This property is exploited for using a dual polarized radar as a remote sens...
متن کاملOn the influence of ocean waves on simulated GNSS-R delay-doppler maps
Global Navigation Satellite System-Reflectometry (GNSS-R), is an established technique that exploits GNSS signals of opportunity reflected from the surface of the ocean, to look primarily at the ocean surface roughness. The strength of this technique, and the primary motivation to carry it forward, is in the fact that GNSS signals are available globally, all the time and over the long term, and...
متن کاملPersistency of ocean swell fields observed from space Fabrice
Using global satellite Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) observations, swell systems are confirmed to travel over very large distances across ocean basins. Satellite observations can provide a global view of swell systems when using a specific ”wave mode” sampling. The data are gathered globally and systematically, but the SAR-derived peak wavelength and directional parameters are restricted to th...
متن کاملOcean surface waves in Hurricane Ike (2008) and Superstorm Sandy (2012): Coupled model predictions and observations
Forecasting hurricane impacts of extremewinds and flooding requires accurate prediction of hurricane structure and storm-induced ocean surface waves days in advance. The waves are complex, especially near landfall when the hurricane winds and water depth varies significantly and the surface waves refract, shoal and dissipate. In this study, we examine the spatial structure, magnitude, and direc...
متن کاملComment on ‘‘A study of the slope probability density function of the ocean waves from radar observations’’ by D. Hauser et al
[1] Intermediate-scale waves (ISW, about 0.02 to 6 m long) are the main contributor of the ocean surface roughness relevant to passive and active microwave remote sensing of the ocean. While wind speed is the most important parameter determining the spectral composition of the ocean surface roughness, analysis of field measurements indicates that the wave spectrum of ISW is strongly modified by...
متن کامل