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Titel Dependence of Drag Coefficient on the Directional Spreading of Ocean Waves
VerfasserIn Chia-Huan Ting, Alexander Babanin, Dmitry Chalikov
Konferenz EGU General Assembly 2011
Medientyp Artikel
Sprache Englisch
Digitales Dokument PDF
Erschienen In: GRA - Volume 13 (2011)
Datensatznummer 250046897
 
Zusammenfassung
Drag coefficient Cd is one of the most important properties used in modelling the air-sea interactions. Most of the dependences employ the sea drag as a function of wind speed U10. Coupling between the atmospheric boundary layer and the ocean surface is usually parameterised in terms of the drag coefficient Cd τ = ρau2* = ρaC10U210 (1) where τ is the wind stress at the ocean surface, ρa is the air density, U10 is the wind speed measured at standard 10m height and u* is the friction velocity. Routinely, C10 is parameterized as a function of mean wind speed U10, but the scatter of experimental data around such parametric dependences is very significant and has not improved noticeably over some 30 years. This scatter imposes a serious limitation on predictions that make use of sea-surface-drag parameterisations. Babanin and Makin (2008) suggested that, apart from the wind speed, C10 depends on a number of other physical properties and phenomena, whose effect on the sea drag should be investigated and incorporated in the final parameterisation in order to reduce the scatter. These properties include, among possible others, the directional spreading of the surface waves. The aim of the present study is to investigate the drag coefficient as a function of such angular spreading. This will be first done by means of numerical modelling with WBLM (Wave Boundary Layer Model, Chalikov and Rainchik, 2010). 1-D equations derived by Chalikov and Rainchik are used here for extensive calculations of WBL structure in order to investigate dependence of the drag coefficient on wind speed for different directional wave spectra. The results will then be compared with the field measurements conducted during the Lake George experiment (Young et al., 2005, Babanin and Makin, 2008). In the Conclusion, we should say that the wind speed is not the only a parameter which can influence the sea drag coefficient. In particular, in this paper dependence of C10 on directional spreading of surface waves was investigated. It is shown that this coefficient increases with higher directional widths and stronger wind forcing. Influence of the wave directional spectrum on the sea drag was analysed for the first time, and it is very essential. Comparisons show that the WBL Model and Lake George field experimental data agree, where available, and this fact supports the model and the analysis of sea-drag dependences and asymptotic behaviours. Account for the directional spread is therefore essential to predict the sea drag accurately and to improve parameterisations of C10. It is apparent that scatter of existing parameterisations cannot be reduced by increasing measurement accuracy; it needs understanding and parameterising multiple physical influences, including the wave directionality.