Wave Height - Wikipedia

Difference between the elevations of a crest and a neighbouring trough
Wave characteristics

In fluid dynamics, the wave height of a surface wave is the difference between the elevations of a crest and a neighboring trough.[1] Wave height is a term used by mariners, as well as in coastal, ocean and naval engineering.

At sea, the term significant wave height is used as a means to introduce a well-defined and standardized statistic to denote the characteristic height of the random waves in a sea state, including wind sea and swell. It is defined in such a way that it more or less corresponds to what a mariner observes when estimating visually the average wave height.

Definitions

[edit]

Depending on context, wave height may be defined in different ways:

  • For a sine wave, the wave height H is twice the amplitude (i.e., the peak-to-peak amplitude):[1] H = 2 a . {\displaystyle H=2a.}
  • For a periodic wave, it is simply the difference between the maximum and minimum of the surface elevation z = η(xcp t):[1] H = max { η ( x − c p t ) } − min { η ( x − c p t ) } , {\displaystyle H=\max \left\{\eta (x\,-\,c_{p}\,t)\right\}-\min \left\{\eta (x-c_{p}\,t)\right\},} with cp the phase speed (or propagation speed) of the wave. The sine wave is a specific case of a periodic wave.
  • In random waves at sea, when the surface elevations are measured with a wave buoy, the individual wave height Hm of each individual wave—with an integer label m, running from 1 to N, to denote its position in a sequence of N waves—is the difference in elevation between a wave crest and trough in that wave. For this to be possible, it is necessary to first split the measured time series of the surface elevation into individual waves. Commonly, an individual wave is denoted as the time interval between two successive downward-crossings through the average surface elevation (upward crossings might also be used). Then the individual wave height of each wave is again the difference between maximum and minimum elevation in the time interval of the wave under consideration.[2]

Significant wave height

[edit] This section is an excerpt from Significant wave height.[edit]

In physical oceanography, the significant wave height (SWH, HTSGW[3] or Hs) is defined traditionally as the mean wave height (trough to crest) of the highest third of the waves (H1/3). It is usually defined as four times the standard deviation of the surface elevation – or equivalently as four times the square root of the zeroth-order moment (area) of the wave spectrum.[4] The symbol Hm0 is usually used for that latter definition. The significant wave height (Hs) may thus refer to Hm0 or H1/3; the difference in magnitude between the two definitions is only a few percent. SWH is used to characterize sea state, including winds and swell.

RMS wave height

[edit]

Another wave-height statistic in common usage is the root-mean-square (or RMS) wave height Hrms, defined as:[2] H rms = 1 N ∑ m = 1 N H m 2 , {\displaystyle H_{\text{rms}}={\sqrt {{\frac {1}{N}}\sum _{m=1}^{N}H_{m}^{2}}},} with Hm again denoting the individual wave heights in a certain time series.

See also

[edit]
  • Sea state
  • Wind wave

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Kinsman (1984, p. 38)
  2. ^ a b Holthuijsen (2007, pp. 24–28)
  3. ^ "About earth :: A global map of wind, weather, and ocean conditions".
  4. ^ Holthuijsen, Leo H. (2007). Waves in Oceanic And Coastal Waters. Cambridge University Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-521-86028-4.

References

[edit]
  • Holthuijsen, Leo H. (2007), Waves in Oceanic and Coastal Waters, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-86028-4, 387 pages.
  • Kinsman, Blair (1984), Wind waves: their generation and propagation on the ocean surface, Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-49511-6, 704 pages.
  • Phillips, Owen M. (1977), The dynamics of the upper ocean (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-29801-6, viii & 336 pages.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Physical oceanography
Waves
  • Airy wave theory
  • Ballantine scale
  • Benjamin–Feir instability
  • Boussinesq approximation
  • Breaking wave
  • Clapotis
  • Cnoidal wave
  • Cross sea
  • Dispersion
  • Edge wave
  • Equatorial waves
  • Gravity wave
  • Green's law
  • Infragravity wave
  • Internal wave
  • Iribarren number
  • Kelvin wave
  • Kinematic wave
  • Longshore drift
  • Luke's variational principle
  • Miche criterion
  • Mild-slope equation
  • Radiation stress
  • Rogue wave
    • Draupner wave
  • Rossby wave
  • Rossby-gravity waves
  • Sea state
  • Seiche
  • Significant wave height
  • Soliton
  • Stokes drift
  • Stokes problem
  • Stokes wave
  • Swell
  • Trochoidal wave
  • Tsunami
    • megatsunami
  • Undertow
  • Ursell number
  • Wave action
  • Wave base
  • Wave height
  • Wave nonlinearity
  • Wave power
  • Wave radar
  • Wave setup
  • Wave shoaling
  • Wave turbulence
  • Wave–current interaction
  • Waves and shallow water
    • one-dimensional Saint-Venant equations
    • shallow water equations
  • Wind fetch
  • Wind setup
  • Wind wave
    • model
UpwellingAntarctic bottom water
Circulation
  • Atmospheric circulation
  • Baroclinity
  • Boundary current
  • Coriolis force
  • Coriolis–Stokes force
  • Craik–Leibovich vortex force
  • Downwelling
  • Eddy
  • Ekman layer
  • Ekman spiral
  • Ekman transport
  • El Niño–Southern Oscillation
  • General circulation model
  • Geochemical Ocean Sections Study
  • Geostrophic current
  • Global Ocean Data Analysis Project
  • Gulf Stream
  • Humboldt Current
  • Hydrothermal circulation
  • Langmuir circulation
  • Longshore drift
  • Loop Current
  • Modular Ocean Model
  • Ocean current
  • Ocean dynamical thermostat
  • Ocean dynamics
  • Ocean gyre
  • Overflow
  • Princeton Ocean Model
  • Rip current
  • Subsurface ocean current
  • Sverdrup balance
  • Thermohaline circulation
    • shutdown
  • Upwelling
  • Whirlpool
  • Wind generated current
  • World Ocean Circulation Experiment
Tides
  • Amphidromic point
  • Earth tide
  • Head of tide
  • Internal tide
  • Lunitidal interval
  • Perigean spring tide
  • Rip tide
  • Rule of twelfths
  • Slack tide
  • Theory of tides
  • Tidal bore
  • Tidal force
  • Tidal power
  • Tidal race
  • Tidal range
  • Tidal resonance
  • Tide gauge
  • Tideline
Landforms
  • Abyssal fan
  • Abyssal plain
  • Atoll
  • Bathymetric chart
  • Carbonate platform
  • Coastal geography
  • Cold seep
  • Continental margin
  • Continental rise
  • Continental shelf
  • Contourite
  • Guyot
  • Hydrography
  • Knoll
  • Ocean bank
  • Oceanic basin
  • Oceanic plateau
  • Oceanic trench
  • Passive margin
  • Seabed
  • Seamount
  • Submarine canyon
  • Submarine volcano
Platetectonics
  • Convergent boundary
  • Divergent boundary
  • Fracture zone
  • Hydrothermal vent
  • Marine geology
  • Mid-ocean ridge
  • Mohorovičić discontinuity
  • Oceanic crust
  • Outer trench swell
  • Ridge push
  • Seafloor spreading
  • Slab pull
  • Slab suction
  • Slab window
  • Subduction
  • Transform fault
  • Vine–Matthews–Morley hypothesis
  • Volcanic arc
Ocean zones
  • Benthic
  • Deep ocean water
  • Deep sea
  • Littoral
  • Mesopelagic
  • Oceanic
  • Pelagic
  • Photic
  • Surf
  • Swash
Sea level
  • Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis
  • Global Sea Level Observing System
  • North West Shelf Operational Oceanographic System
  • Sea-level curve
  • Sea level drop
  • Sea level rise
  • World Geodetic System
Acoustics
  • Deep scattering layer
  • Ocean acoustic tomography
  • Sofar bomb
  • SOFAR channel
  • Underwater acoustics
Satellites
  • Jason-1
  • OSTM/Jason-2
  • Jason-3
Related
  • Acidification
  • Argo
  • Benthic lander
  • Color of water
  • DSV Alvin
  • Marginal sea
  • Marine energy
  • Marine pollution
  • Mooring
  • National Oceanographic Data Center
  • Ocean
  • Explorations
  • Observations
  • Reanalysis
  • Ocean surface topography
  • Ocean temperature
  • Ocean thermal energy conversion
  • Oceanography
    • Outline of oceanography
  • Pelagic sediment
  • Sea surface microlayer
  • Sea surface temperature
  • Seawater
  • Science On a Sphere
  • Stratification
  • Thermocline
  • Underwater glider
  • Water column
  • World Ocean Atlas
  • Category
  • Commons
  • icon Oceans portal

Tag » How Are Wave Heights Measured