Paper
14 October 2014 Analysis of internal waves around the Korean Peninsula using RADARSAT-1 data
Dan-Bee Hong, Chan-Su Yang, Tae-Ho Kim, Kazuo Ouchi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Surface signatures of oceanic internal waves (IWs) are often observed in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images since IWs change surface roughness through the interaction of small-scale ocean waves with varying currents induced by IWs. If we know the relationship between the vertical and horizontal parameters governing IWs, the mixed layer depth (MLD) can be estimated from SAR data since IWs propagate along a pycnocline where the water density changes rapidly. This study presents a method for estimating MLD from SAR data using IW images observed by RADARSAT-1 over the east waters of the Korean Peninsula. To interpret IWs using SAR data, the backscatter radar cross section is computed by applying the small perturbation model to the sea surface perturbed by varying surface currents. Wave height spectrum is computed by varying the upper layer depth of mixed layer from 5 m to 100 m with 1 m depth interval. The surface current field is assumed to move with the IWs, and is described by the KdV equation. The computed RCS is then compared with the RADARSAT-1 data, resulting in satisfactory agreement of the estimated depth of IWs with other data.
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Dan-Bee Hong, Chan-Su Yang, Tae-Ho Kim, and Kazuo Ouchi "Analysis of internal waves around the Korean Peninsula using RADARSAT-1 data", Proc. SPIE 9240, Remote Sensing of the Ocean, Sea Ice, Coastal Waters, and Large Water Regions 2014, 92400M (14 October 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2067092
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KEYWORDS
Synthetic aperture radar

Radar

Solitons

Scanning probe microscopy

Scattering

Data modeling

Wave propagation

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