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Observations of surface waves interacting with ice using stereo imaging
Author(s) -
Campbell Alexander J.,
Bechle Adam J.,
Wu Chin H.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1002/2014jc009894
Subject(s) - energy flux , wavelength , reflection (computer programming) , flux (metallurgy) , geology , sea ice , optics , materials science , physics , climatology , astronomy , programming language , computer science , metallurgy
A powerful Automated Trinocular Stereo Imaging System (ATSIS) is used to remotely measure waves interacting with three distinct ice types: brash, frazil, and pancake. ATSIS is improved with a phase‐only correlation matching algorithm and parallel computation to provide high spatial and temporal resolution 3‐D profiles of the water/ice surface, from which the wavelength, frequency, and energy flux are calculated. Alongshore spatial frequency distributions show that pancake and frazil ices differentially attenuate at a greater rate for higher‐frequency waves, causing a decrease in mean frequency. In contrast, wave propagation through brash ice causes a rapid increase in the dominant wave frequency, which may be caused by nonlinear energy transfer to higher frequencies due to collisions between the brash ice particles. Consistent to the results in frequency, the wavelengths in pancake and frazil ices increase but decrease in brash ice. The total wave energy fluxes decrease exponentially in both pancake and frazil ice, whereas the overall energy flux remain constant in the brash ice due to thin layer thickness. The spatial energy flux distributions also reveal that wave reflection occurs at the boundary of each ice layer, with reflection coefficient decaying exponentially away from the ice interface. Reflection is the strongest at the pancake/ice‐free and frazil/brash interfaces and the weakest at the brash/ice‐free interface. These high resolution observations measured by ATSIS demonstrate the spatially variable nature of waves propagating through ice.