Analysis of Steep and Breaking Ocean Surface Waves Using Data from an Airborne Scanning Lidar System

Abstract

It is clear intuitively that at high wind speeds breaking waves become increasingly important to air-sea interaction. Recently, an airborne scanning lidar system was used to obtain 2D spatial topography of ocean surface waves. Such data were used to study the wavenumber spectrum in detail. Here, we applied the wavelet transform to the 1D surface topography in the direction of mean wind. We then estimated the steep wave statistics, LAMBDA(TAU)(kappa), and compared the results with other field observations. We have shown that the wavelet analysis methodology is able to track steep wave events and give estimates of the amount of high wave slope events that cover a given area of ocean. Analysis of the results shows that high wave slope crests appear over the entire range of wavenumbers resolved, with a large amount being much shorter in wavelength than the dominant wave. At low wave slope thresholds, the total crest length is approximately independent of wind forcing for all wave fields considered. All wave fields studied have the same amount of wave crests regardless of wind forcing at low slope threshold. If the steep wave statistic is hypothesized to evolve into the breaking wave statistic at a specific wave slope threshold, comparison of LAMBDA(TAU) (kappa) with previous independent measurements of the breaking wave statistic gives a wave slope threshold of 0.12. In addition, comparison of the steep wave statistic at this extrapolated wave slope threshold with independent breaking wave measurements suggest that other factors besides the wind speed control the level of the steep wave statistic.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jul 01, 2003
Accession Number
ADA416563

Entities

People

  • Tetsu Hara

Organizations

  • University of Rhode Island

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Airborne
  • Coastal Engineering
  • Contracts
  • High Resolution
  • Measurement
  • Observation
  • Ocean Waves
  • Oceanography
  • Oceans
  • Physical Oceanography
  • Rhode Island
  • Signal Processing
  • Spectra
  • Statistics
  • Surface Waves
  • Two Dimensional
  • Waves

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science / Meteorology, specifically Wind Wave Turbulence.