Detection and characterization of deep water wave breaking using moderate incidence angle microwave backscatter from the sea surface
Detection and characterization of deep water wave breaking using moderate incidence angle microwave backscatter from the sea surface
Date
1990-05
Authors
Jessup, Andrew T.
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Location
Chesapeake Bay
DOI
10.1575/1912/3149
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Keywords
Ocean waves
Abstract
The importance of wave breaking in both microwave remote sensing and
air-sea interaction has led to this investigation of the utility of a Ku-Band CW
Doppler scatterometer to detect and characterize wave breaking in the open ocean.
Field and laboratory measurements by previous authors of microwave backscatter
from sharp-crested and breaking waves have shown that these events can exhibit
characteristic signatures in moderate incidence angle measurements of the radar
cross-section (RCS) and Doppler spectrum. Specifically, breaking events have been
associated with polarization independent sea spikes in the RCS accompanied by
increased mean frequency and bandwidth of the Doppler spectrum.
Simultaneous microwave, video, and environmental measurements were made
during the SAXON experiment off Chesapeake Bay in the fall of 1988. The
scatterometer was pointed upwind with an incidence angle of 45 degrees and an
illumination area small compared to the wavelength of the dominant surface
waves. An autocovariance estimation technique was used to produced time series
of the RCS, mean Doppler frequency, and Doppler spectral bandwidth in real-time.
The joint statistics of the microwave quantities indicative of breaking are
used to investigate detection schemes for breaking events identified from the video
recordings. The most successful scheme is based on thresholds in both the RCS
and the Doppler bandwidth determined from joint distributions for breaking and
non-breaking waves. Microwave events consisting of a sea spike in the RCS
accompanied by a large bandwidth are associated with the steep forward face of
waves in the early stages of breaking. The location of the illumination area with
respect to the phase of the breaking wave, the stage of breaking development, and
the orientation of an individual crest with respect to the antenna look-direction
all influence the detect ability of a breaking event occurring in the vicinity of the
radar spot. Since sea spikes tend to occur on the forward face of waves in the
process of breaking, the whitecap associated with a given sea spike may occur
after the crest of the wave responsible for the sea spike has passed the center of
the illumination area. Approximately 70% of the waves which produce whitecaps
within a distance of 5m of the bore sight location are successfully identified by a
threshold-based detection scheme utilizing both RCS and bandwidth information.
The sea spike statistics are investigated as functions of wave field
parameters and friction velocity u*. For VV and HH polarization, the frequency
of sea spike occurrence and the sea spike contribution to the mean RCS show an
approximately cubic dependence on u*, which is consistent with theoretical
modelling and various measures of whitecap coverage. The data also suggest that
the average RCS of an individual sea spike is not dependent on u*. At high
friction velocities (u*≈40-50cms-l), the contribution of sea spikes to the mean RCS
is in the range of 5-10% for VV and 10-20% for HH. The wind speed dependence
of the percentage of crests producing sea spikes is comparable to that of the
fraction of breaking crests reported by previous authors. The percentage of wave
crests producing sea spikes is found to vary approximately as (Re*)1.5, where Re*
is a Reynolds number based on u* and the dominant surface wavelength. This
result agrees with measurements of the degree of wave breaking by. previous
authors and is shown to be consistent with a cubic dependence on u *. Models
for the probability of wave breaking as a function of moments of the wave height
spectrum are compared to our results. The Doppler frequency and bandwidth
measurements are also used to inquire into the kinematics of the breaking process.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution May 1990
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Citation
Jessup, A. T. (1990). Detection and characterization of deep water wave breaking using moderate incidence angle microwave backscatter from the sea surface [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/3149