Whitecap and Wind Stress Observations by Microwave Radiometers: Global Coverage and Extreme Conditions

Abstract

Whitecaps manifest surface wave breaking that impacts many ocean processes, of which surface wind stress is the driving force. For close to a half century of quantitative whitecap reporting, only a small number of observations are obtained under conditions with wind speed exceeding 25 m s−1. Whitecap contribution is a critical component of ocean surface microwave thermal emission. In the forward solution of microwave thermal emission, the input forcing parameter is wind speed, which is used to generate the modeled surface wind stress, surface wave spectrum, and whitecap coverage necessary for the subsequent electromagnetic (EM) computation. In this respect, microwave radiometer data can be used to evaluate various formulations of the drag coefficient, whitecap coverage, and surface wave spectrum. In reverse, whitecap coverage and surface wind stress can be retrieved from microwave radiometer data by employing precalculated solutions of an analytical microwave thermal emission model that yields good agreement with field measurements. There are many published microwave radiometer datasets covering a wide range of frequency, incidence angle, and both vertical and horizontal polarizations, with maximum wind speed exceeding 90 m s−1. These datasets provide information of whitecap coverage and surface wind stress from global oceans and in extreme wind conditions. Breaking wave energy dissipation rate per unit surface area can be estimated also by making use of its linear relationship with whitecap coverage derived from earlier studies.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2019
Source ID
10.1175/jpo-d-19-0061.1

Entities

People

  • Nicolas Reul
  • Paul Hwang
  • Simon Yueh
  • Thomas Meißner

Organizations

  • California Institute of Technology
  • IFREMER
  • Office of Naval Research
  • Remote Sensing Systems
  • United States Naval Research Laboratory

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Climatology
  • Coastal Oceanography
  • Radar Systems Engineering.