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Water Surface Currents, Short Gravity-Capillary Waves and Radar BackscatterDespite their importance for air-sea interaction and microwave remote sensing of the ocean surface, intrinsic properties of short gravity-capillary waves are not well established. This is largely due to water surface currents and their effects on the direct measurements of wave parameters conducted at a fixed point. Frequencies of small scale waves propagating on a surface which itself is in motion, are subject to Doppler shifts. Hence, the high frequency tail of the wave spectra obtained from such temporal observations is smeared. Conversion of this smeared measured-frequency spectra to intrinsic-frequency (or wavenumber) spectra requires corrections for the Doppler shifts. Such attempts in the past have not been very successful in particular when field data were used. This becomes evident if the amplitude modulation of short waves by underlying long waves is considered. Microwave radar studies show that the amplitude of a short wave component attains its maximum value near the crests and its minimum in the troughs of the long waves. Doppler-shifted wave data yield similar results but much larger in modulation magnitude, as expected. In general, Doppler shift corrections reduce the modulation magnitude. Overcorrection may result in a negligible modulation or even in a strong modulation with the maximum amplitude in the wave troughs. The latter situation is clearly contradictory to our visual observations as well as the radar results and imply that the advection by currents is overestimated. In this study, a differential-advection approach is used in which small scale waves are advected by the currents evaluated not at the free surface, but at a depth proportional to their wavelengths. Applicability of this approach is verified by the excellent agreement in phase and magnitude of short-wave modulation between results based on radar and on wave-gauge measurements conducted on a lake.
Document ID
19960021669
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Atakturk, Serhad S.
(Washington Univ. Seattle, WA United States)
Katsaros, Kristina B.
(Washington Univ. Seattle, WA United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
June 30, 1993
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-200894
NAS 1.26:200894
Report Number: NASA-CR-200894
Report Number: NAS 1.26:200894
Meeting Information
Meeting: Air-Sea Interface Symposium, Radio and Acoustic Sensing, Turbulence and Wave Dynamics
Location: Marseille
Country: France
Start Date: June 24, 1993
End Date: June 30, 1993
Accession Number
96N24945
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-1322
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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