DocumentCode
3209170
Title
Wave Measurements from Subsurface Buoys
Author
Pedersen, Torstein ; Siegel, Eric
Author_Institution
Nortek AS, Vangkroken
fYear
2008
fDate
17-19 March 2008
Firstpage
224
Lastpage
233
Abstract
Directional wave measurements in deep water locations are intrinsically difficult to measure without the use of a surface wave buoy. Traditional acoustic Doppler current profilers do not have the appropriate data collection and processing technique to be mounted on a subsurface buoy. Nortek developed the SUV wave data collection and processing technique for measuring ocean waves from a subsurface buoy using a Nortek acoustic wave and current profiler (AWAC). In 2006 Nortek initiated a collaborative experiment to validate the SUV method and explore mooring performance by deploying two Nortek AWACs on different shape subsurface buoys offshore of Lunenburg Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada. A surface wave buoy was located nearby as an independent reference. The AWACs were deployed from September to November 2006 and measured waves over 4 m in significant wave height during three storms. The results indicate that the acoustic surface tracking (AST), used to measure non-directional wave properties, was a robust technique and worked very well with the AWACs deployed on a subsurface buoy. Greater than 99% of all AST measurements passed the quality control checks (comparable to results from a bottom mounted AWAC) and measurements of wave height and period were in excellent agreement with the surface wave buoy. The wave directional estimates were in good agreement with the surface wave buoy, but indicated clear frequency bands with increased directional uncertainty. An analysis of buoy motion suggests that the frequencies of poor directional estimates are coincident with the natural frequency of the mooring system. Guidance is offered to design a subsurface buoy which has a natural frequency outside of the wave band such that this technique may be used widely for offshore directional wave measurements.
Keywords
data acquisition; ocean waves; oceanographic techniques; storms; AD 2006 09 to 11; Canada; Lunenburg Bay; Nova Scotia; SUV wave data collection; acoustic Doppler current profilers; acoustic surface tracking; acoustic wave and current profiler; deep water locations; directional wave measurements; mooring system; ocean wave data processing; storms; subsurface buoy design; surface wave buoy; Acoustic measurements; Acoustic waves; Collaboration; Current measurement; Frequency estimation; Ocean waves; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Surface acoustic waves; Surface waves;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Current Measurement Technology, 2008. CMTC 2008. IEEE/OES 9th Working Conference on
Conference_Location
Charlston, SC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1485-7
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1486-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCM.2008.4480872
Filename
4480872
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