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Waves and Swells in High Wind and Extreme Fetches, Measurements in the Southern Ocean

Frontiers in Marine Science 2019 80 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alexander V. Babanin, W. Erick Rogers, Ricardo de Camargo, M Doble, Tom Durrant, Kirill Filchuk, Kirill Filchuk, Kevin Ewans, Mark Hemer, T. T. Janssen, B.A. Kelly-Gerreyn, B.A. Kelly-Gerreyn, Keith MacHutchon, Peter McComb, Fangli Qiao, Eric Schulz, Alex Skvortsov, Alex Skvortsov, Jim Thomson, Marcello Vichi Nelson Violante-Carvalho, David Wang, Takuji Waseda, Greg Williams, Ian R. Young, Marcello Vichi

Summary

Researchers collected in situ wave and swell measurements in the Southern Ocean under high wind and extreme fetch conditions, providing rare field data to improve the accuracy of ocean wave prediction models in one of Earth's most energetic and data-sparse marine environments.

Study Type Environmental

The generation and evolution of ocean waves by wind is one of the most complex phenomena in geophysics, and is of great practical significance. Predictive capabilities of respective wave models, however, are impaired by lack of field in situ observations, particularly in extreme Metocean conditions. The paper outlines and highlights important gaps in understanding the Metocean processes and suggests a major observational program in the Southern Ocean. This large, but poorly investigated part of the World Ocean is home to extreme weather around the year. The observational network would include distributed system of buoys (drifting and stationary) and autonomous surface vehicles (ASV), intended for measurements of waves and air-sea fluxes in the Southern Ocean. It would help to resolve the issues of limiting fetches, extreme Extra-Tropical cyclones, swell propagation and attenuation, wave-current interactions, and address the topics of wave-induced dispersal of floating objects, wave-ice interactions in the Marginal Ice Zone, Metocean climatology and its connection with the global climate.

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