DocumentCode
746863
Title
Very high-frequency radar mapping of surface currents
Author
Shay, Lynn K. ; Cook, Thomas M. ; Peters, Hartmut ; Mariano, Arthur J. ; Weisberg, Robert ; An, P. Edgar ; Soloviev, Alexander ; Luther, Mark
Author_Institution
Rosenstiel Sch. of Marine & Atmos. Sci., Miami Univ., FL, USA
Volume
27
Issue
2
fYear
2002
fDate
4/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
155
Lastpage
169
Abstract
An ocean surface current radar (OSCR) in the very high frequency (VHF) mode was deployed in South Florida Ocean Measurement Center (SFOMC) during the summer of 1999. During this period, a 29-d continuous time series of vector surface currents was acquired starting on 9 July 1999 and ending 7 August 1999. Over a 20-min sample interval, the VHF radar mapped coastal ocean currents over a 7.5 km × 8 km domain with a horizontal resolution of 250 m at 700 grid points. A total of 2078 snapshots of the two-dimensional current vectors were acquired during this time series and of these samples, only 69 samples (3.3%) were missing from the time series. During this period, complex surface circulation patterns were observed that included coherent, submesoscale vortices with diameters of 2 to 3 km inshore of the Florida Current. Comparisons to subsurface measurements from moored and ship-board acoustic Doppler current profiles revealed regression slopes of close to unity with biases ranging from 4 to 8 cm s-1 between surface and subsurface measurements at 3 to 4 m beneath the surface. Correlation coefficients were 0.8 or above with phases of - 10 to - 20° suggestive of an anticyclonic veering of current with depth relative to the surface current. The radar-derived surface current field provided spatial context for an observational network using mooring-, ship- and autonomous underwater vehicle-sensor packages that were deployed at the SFOMC
Keywords
backscatter; oceanographic techniques; remote sensing by radar; vortices; 250 m; 7.5 km; 8 km; South Florida Ocean Measurement Center; VHF radar mapping; anticyclonic veering; coastal ocean currents; coherent submesoscale vortices; complex surface circulation patterns; current profiles; ocean surface current radar; radar-derived surface current field; very high frequency mode; Acoustic measurements; Current measurement; Doppler radar; Frequency; Oceans; Pollution measurement; Radar measurements; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Surface waves;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0364-9059
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JOE.2002.1002470
Filename
1002470
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