On Surface Waves Generated by Extra-Tropical Cyclones—Part I: Multi-Satellite Measurements

Author:

Cheshm Siyahi Vahid1ORCID,Kudryavtsev Vladimir12ORCID,Yurovskaya Maria12ORCID,Collard Fabrice3,Chapron Bertrand4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Satellite Oceanography Laboratory, Russian State Hydrometeorological University, 195196 St. Petersburg, Russia

2. Marine Hydrophysical Institute RAS, 299011 Sevastopol, Russia

3. OceanDataLab, 29280 Locmaria-Plouzané, France

4. Laboratoire d’Océanographie Physique et Spatiale (LOPS), Institut Français de Recherche pour l’Exploitation de la Mer, 29280 Plouzané, France

Abstract

Surface waves generated by Extra-Tropical Cyclones (ETCs) can significantly affect shipping, fishing, offshore oil and gas production, and other marine activities. This paper presents the results of a satellite data-based investigation of wind waves generated by two North Atlantic ETCs. These ETCs were fast-moving systems, inhibiting resonance (synchronism) between the group velocity of the generated waves and the ETC translation velocity. In these cases, wave generation begins when the front boundary of the storm appears at a given ocean location point. Since developing waves are slow, they move backward relative to the storm, grow in time, and then leave the ETC stormy area through the rear sector. Multi-satellite observations confirm such a paradigm, revealing that the storm regions are filled with young developing wind waves, the most developed in the rear-right sector. As observed, the energy of these waves grew in time during the ETC life span. It is demonstrated that the extended-fetch concept (inherent for Tropical Cyclones) does not apply to ETC. Instead, by analogy, the concept of extended-duration wave growth is more relevant. Satellite observations confirmed the validity of duration-laws for waves generated by ETCs, and demonstrated that extended-fetch solutioncan be valid at time scales exceeding the lifespan of considered ETCs.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Ministry of Science and Education of the Russian Federation

ESA MAXSS

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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