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Rare photo of a
rogue wave |
| Ship-sinking
monster waves revealed by ESA satellites
21
July 2004 Once dismissed as a
nautical myth, freakish ocean waves that rise as tall as ten-storey
apartment blocks have been accepted as a leading cause of large ship
sinkings. Results from ESA's ERS satellites helped establish the
widespread existence of these 'rogue' waves and are now being used
to study their origins. Severe weather has sunk more than 200
supertankers and container ships exceeding 200 metres in length
during the last two decades. Rogue waves are believed to be the
major cause in many such cases.
Mariners who survived similar encounters have had remarkable
stories to tell. In February 1995 the cruiser liner Queen Elizabeth
II met a 29-metre high rogue wave during a hurricane in the North
Atlantic that Captain Ronald Warwick described as "a great wall of
water
it looked as if we were going into the White Cliffs of
Dover."
And within the week between February and March 2001 two hardened
tourist cruisers the Bremen and the Caledonian Star had their
bridge windows smashed by 30-metre rogue waves in the South
Atlantic, the former ship left drifting without navigation or
propulsion for a period of two hours.
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Damage done by a
rogue wave |
| "The incidents
occurred less than a thousand kilometres apart from each other,"
said Wolfgang Rosenthal - Senior Scientist with the GKSS
Forschungszentrum GmbH research centre, located in Geesthacht in
Germany - who has studied rogue waves for years. "All the
electronics were switched off on the Bremen as they drifted parallel
to the waves, and until they were turned on again the crew were
thinking it could have been their last day alive.
"The same phenomenon could have sunk many less lucky vessels: two
large ships sink every week on average, but the cause is never
studied to the same detail as an air crash. It simply gets put down
to 'bad weather'."
Offshore platforms have also been struck: on 1 January 1995 the
Draupner oil rig in the North Sea was hit by a wave whose height was
measured by an onboard laser device at 26 metres, with the highest
waves around it reaching 12 metres.
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Giant wave in Bay of
Biscay |
| Objective radar
evidence from this and other platforms radar data from the North
Sea's Goma oilfield recorded 466 rogue wave encounters in 12 years -
helped convert previously sceptical scientists, whose statistics
showed such large deviations from the surrounding sea state should
occur only once every 10000 years.
The fact that rogue waves actually take place relatively
frequently had major safety and economic implications, since current
ships and offshore platforms are built to withstand maximum wave
heights of only 15 metres.
In December 2000 the European Union initiated a scientific
project called MaxWave to confirm the widespread occurrence of rogue
waves, model how they occur and consider their implications for ship
and offshore structure design criteria. And as part of MaxWave, data
from ESA's ERS radar satellites were first used to carry out a
global rogue wave census.
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ERS
satellite |
| "Without aerial
coverage from radar sensors we had no chance of finding anything,"
added Rosenthal, who headed the three-year MaxWave project. "All we
had to go on was radar data collected from oil platforms. So we were
interested in using ERS from the start."
ESA's twin spacecraft ERS-1 and 2 launched in July 1991 and
April 1995 respectively both have a Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
as their main instrument.
The SAR works in several different modes; while over the ocean it
works in wave mode, acquiring 10 by 5 km 'imagettes' of the sea
surface every 200 km.
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Example of an
imagette from ERS-2 |
| These small
imagettes are then mathematically transformed into averaged-out
breakdowns of wave energy and direction, called ocean-wave spectra.
ESA makes these spectra publicly available; they are useful for
weather centres to improve the accuracy of their sea forecast
models.
"The raw imagettes are not made available, but with their
resolution of ten metres we believed they contained a wealth of
useful information by themselves," said Rosenthal. "Ocean wave
spectra provide mean sea state data but imagettes depict the
individual wave heights including the extremes we were interested
in.
"ESA provided us with three weeks' worth of data around 30,000
separate imagettes selected around the time that the Bremen and
Caledonian Star were struck. The images were processed and
automatically searched for extreme waves at the German Aerospace
Centre (DLR)."
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Giant wave detected
in ERS-2 imagette data |
| Despite the
relatively brief length of time the data covered, the MaxWave team
identified more than ten individual giant waves around the globe
above 25 metres in height.
"Having proved they existed, in higher numbers than anyone
expected, the next step is to analyse if they can be forecasted,"
Rosenthal added. "MaxWave formally concluded at the end of last year
although two lines of work are carrying on from it one is to
improve ship design by learning how ships are sunk, and the other is
to examine more satellite data with a view to analysing if
forecasting is possible."
A new research project called WaveAtlas will use two years worth
of ERS imagettes to create a worldwide atlas of rogue wave events
and carry out statistical analyses. The Principal Investigator is
Susanne Lehner, Associate Professor in the Division of Applied
Marine Physics at the University of Miami, who also worked on
MaxWave while at DLR, with Rosental a co-investigator on the
project.
"Looking through the imagettes ends up feeling like
flying, because you can follow the sea state along the track of the
satellite," Lehner said. "Other features like ice floes, oil slicks
and ships are also visible on them, and so there's interest in using
them for additional fields of study.
"Only radar satellites can provide the truly global data sampling
needed for statistical analysis of the oceans, because they can see
through clouds and darkness, unlike their optical counterparts. In
stormy weather, radar images are thus the only relevant information
available."
So far some patterns have already been found. Rogue waves are
often associated with sites where ordinary waves encounter ocean
currents and eddies. The strength of the current concentrates the
wave energy, forming larger waves Lehner compares it to an optical
lens, concentrating energy in a small area.
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Giant wave in a wave
tank |
| This is
especially true in the case of the notoriously dangerous Agulhas
current off the east coast of South Africa, but rogue wave
associations are also found with other currents such as the Gulf
Stream in the North Atlantic, interacting with waves coming down
from the Labrador Sea.
However the data show rogue waves also occur well away from
currents, often occurring in the vicinity of weather fronts and
lows. Sustained winds from long-lived storms exceeding 12 hours may
enlarge waves moving at an optimum speed in sync with the wind too
quickly and they'd move ahead of the storm and dissipate, too slowly
and they would fall behind.
"We know some of the reasons for the rogue waves, but we do not
know them all," Rosenthal concluded. The WaveAtlas project is
scheduled to continue until the first quarter of 2005.
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