A multimodal wave spectrum-based approach for statistical downscaling of local wave climate

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

C. A. Hegermiller (North Central Climate Science Centre, University of California)

J. A.A. Antolinez (Universidad de Cantabria)

A. Rueda (Universidad de Cantabria)

P. Camus (Universidad de Cantabria)

J. Perez (Universidad de Cantabria)

L. H. Erikson (North Central Climate Science Centre)

P. L. Barnard (North Central Climate Science Centre)

F. J. Mendez (Universidad de Cantabria)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-16-0191.1 Final published version
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Journal title
Journal of Physical Oceanography
Issue number
2
Volume number
47
Pages (from-to)
375-386
Downloads counter
128

Abstract

Characterization of wave climate by bulk wave parameters is insufficient for many coastal studies, including those focused on assessing coastal hazards and long-term wave climate influences on coastal evolution. This issue is particularly relevant for studies using statistical downscaling of atmospheric fields to local wave conditions, which are often multimodal in large ocean basins (e.g., Pacific Ocean). Swell may be generated in vastly different wave generation regions, yielding complex wave spectra that are inadequately represented by a single set of bulk wave parameters. Furthermore, the relationship between atmospheric systems and local wave conditions is complicated by variations in arrival time of wave groups from different parts of the basin. Here, this study addresses these two challenges by improving upon the spatiotemporal definition of the atmospheric predictor used in the statistical downscaling of local wave climate. The improved methodology separates the local wave spectrum into "wave families," defined by spectral peaks and discrete generation regions, and relates atmospheric conditions in distant regions of the ocean basin to local wave conditions by incorporating travel times computed from effective energy flux across the ocean basin. When applied to locations with multimodal wave spectra, including Southern California and Trujillo, Peru, the new methodology improves the ability of the statistical model to project significant wave height, peak period, and direction for each wave family, retaining more information from the full wave spectrum. This work is the base of statistical downscaling by weather types, which has recently been applied to coastal flooding and morphodynamic applications.