Saildrone Direct Covariance Wind Stress in Various Wind and Current Regimes of the Tropical Pacific

Author:

Reeves Eyre J. E. Jack12ORCID,Cronin Meghan F.2,Zhang Dongxiao12,Thompson Elizabeth J.3,Fairall Christopher W.3,Edson James B.4

Affiliation:

1. a Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean and Ecosystem Studies, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

2. b NOAA/Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, Washington

3. c NOAA/Physical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

4. d Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts

Abstract

Abstract High-frequency wind measurements from Saildrone autonomous surface vehicles are used to calculate wind stress in the tropical east Pacific. Comparison between direct covariance (DC) and bulk wind stress estimates demonstrates very good agreement. Building on previous work that showed the bulk input data were reliable, our results lend credibility to the DC estimates. Wind flow distortion by Saildrones is comparable to or smaller than other platforms. Motion correction results in realistic wind spectra, albeit with signatures of swell-coherent wind fluctuations that may be unrealistically strong. Fractional differences between DC and bulk wind stress magnitude are largest at wind speeds below 4 m s−1. The size of this effect, however, depends on choice of stress direction assumptions. Past work has shown the importance of using current-relative (instead of Earth-relative) winds to achieve accurate wind stress magnitude. We show that it is also important for wind stress direction. Significance Statement We use data from Saildrone uncrewed oceanographic research vehicles to investigate the horizontal forces applied to the surface of the ocean by the action of the wind. We compare two methods to calculate the forces: one uses several simplifying assumptions, and the other makes fewer assumptions but is error prone if the data are incorrectly processed. The two methods agree well, suggesting that Saildrone vehicles are suitable for both methods and that the data processing methods work. Our results show that it is important to consider ocean currents, as well as winds, in order to achieve accurate magnitude and direction of the surface forces.

Funder

Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean and Ecosystem Studies

Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program

Climate Program Office

Office of Marine and Aviation Operations

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

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