DocumentCode :
1091590
Title :
An Empirical Method to Derive Ocean Waves From Second-Order Bragg Scattering: Prospects and Limitations
Author :
Gurgel, Klaus-Werner ; Essen, Heinz-Hermann ; Schlick, Thomas
Author_Institution :
Inst. fur Meereskunde, Hamburg Univ.
Volume :
31
Issue :
4
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
804
Lastpage :
811
Abstract :
High-frequency (HF) radar wave processing is often based on the inversion of the Barrick-Weber equations, introduced in 1977. This theory reaches its limitations if the length of the Bragg-scattering wave raises to the order of the significant waveheight, because some assumptions are no longer met. In this case, the only solution is moving to lower radar frequencies, which is not possible or desirable in all cases. This paper describes work on an empirical solution which intends to overcome this limitation. However, during high sea state, the first-order Bragg peaks sometimes could not be clearly identified which avoids the access to the second-order sidebands. These cases cause problems to the algorithm which have not been solved yet and currently limit the maximum significant waveheight to about the same values as reported for the integral inversion method. The regression parameters of the empirical solution calibrated from the European Radar Ocean Sensing (EuroROSE) data set are constant values for the complete experiment and when applied to the HF radar data they reconstruct the measurements by a colocated wave buoy quite well. When including a radar-frequency-dependent scaling factor to the regression parameters, the new algorithm can also be used at different radar frequencies. The second-order frequency bands used for the empirical solution are sometimes disturbed by radio interference and ship echoes. Investigations are presented to identify and solve these situations
Keywords :
backscatter; integral equations; ocean waves; oceanographic techniques; regression analysis; remote sensing by radar; European radar ocean sensing; HF radar data; colocated wave buoy; empirical method; integral inversion method; ocean waves; radar-frequency-dependent scaling factor; radio interference; regression parameters; second-order Bragg scattering; second-order frequency bands; ship echoes; Electromagnetic interference; Equations; Frequency; Hafnium; Marine vehicles; Ocean waves; Radar measurements; Radar scattering; Radiofrequency identification; Sea measurements; Empirical method; high-frequency (HF) radar; ocean wave spectra; surface current;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0364-9059
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2006.886225
Filename :
4089065
Link To Document :
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