Abstract

The main purpose of our work is to investigate the performance of wave breaking and its effect on wave retrieval in data acquired from the Chinese Gaofen-3 (GF-3) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) at C-band and the German TerraSAR-X (TS-X) at X-band. The SAR images available for this study included 140 GF-3 images acquired in quad-polarization strip (QPS) mode and 50 dual-polarized (vertical-vertical (VV) and horizontal-horizontal (HH)) TS-X images acquired in stripmap (SM) mode. Moreover, these images were collocated with the waves simulated by the numeric WAVEWATCH-III (WW3) (version 5.16) model and HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) current. In particular, a few images covered the moored buoys monitored by the National Data Buoy Center (NDBC) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The comparison between the WW3-simulated results and the significant wave heights (SWHs) from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) reanalysis data (ERA-5) showed that the correlation coefficient (COR) was 0.4–0.6 with a root mean squared error (RMSE) of about 0.2 m at SWHs of 0–4 m. The winds were inverted using VV-polarized geophysical model functions (GMFs), e.g., CSARMOD-GF for the GF-3 images and XMOD2 for the TS-X images. The Bragg resonant roughness in the normalized radar cross section (NRCS) was simulated using a radar backscattering model and the SAR-derived wind, WW3-simulated wave parameters, and HYCOM current. Then, the contribution of the non-polarized (NP) wave breaking to the SAR data was estimated by the VV-polarized NRCS, the HH-polarized NRCS, and the polarization ratio (PR) of the co-polarized Bragg resonant components in the NRCS. Because co-polarized Bragg resonant components in the NRCSs have poor results, due to the saturation for wind speeds greater than 20 m/s, the analysis of wave breaking is excluded at such conditions. The results revealed that the backscattering signal in the C-band was more sensitive to wave breaking than the backscattering signal in the X-band. Interestingly, the ratio had a linear correlation with wind speed. Moreover, the variation in the bias (inverted SWH minus WW3 simulation) showed that the bias increased as the wind speed (>8 m/s) and whitecap coverage (>0.005) increased. Following this rationale, wave retrieval during tropical cyclones should consider the influence of wave breaking.

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