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Global coastal attenuation of wind-waves observed with radar altimetry

Marcello Passaro, Mark Hemer, Graham D. Quartly, Christian Schwatke, Denise Dettmering, Florian Seitz

2021Nature Communications66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Coastal studies of wave climate and evaluations of wave energy resources are mainly regional and based on the use of computationally very expensive models or a network of in-situ data. Considering the significant wave height, satellite radar altimetry provides an established global and relatively long-term source, whose coastal data are nevertheless typically flagged as unreliable within 30 km of the coast. This study exploits the reprocessing of the radar altimetry signals with a dedicated fitting algorithm to retrieve several years of significant wave height records in the coastal zone. We show significant variations in annual cycle amplitudes and mean state in the last 30 km from the coastline compared to offshore, in areas that were up to now not observable with standard radar altimetry. Consequently, a decrease in the average wave energy flux is observed. Globally, we found that the mean significant wave height at 3 km off the coast is on average 22% smaller than offshore, the amplitude of the annual cycle is reduced on average by 14% and the mean energy flux loses 38% of its offshore value.

Topics & Concepts

Significant wave heightAltimeterSubmarine pipelineEnergy fluxRadarAmplitudeMeteorologySatelliteAttenuationWave heightGeologyWind wave modelEnvironmental scienceWind speedSea levelSea stateWind waveRemote sensingClimatologyOceanographyGeographyPhysicsTelecommunicationsComputer scienceOpticsAstronomyQuantum mechanicsOcean Waves and Remote SensingTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
Global coastal attenuation of wind-waves observed with radar altimetry | Litcius