Abstract

AbstractNumerous tidal phenomena, including river tides, internal tides, and tides in ice‐covered bay, are nonstationary, which pose a great challenge for traditional tidal analysis methods. Based on the independent point scheme and cubic spline interpolation, a new approach, namely the enhanced harmonic analysis, is developed to deal with nonstationary tides. A MATLAB toolbox, S_TIDE, developed from the widely used T_TIDE, is used to realize the approach. The efficiency of S_TIDE is validated by analyzing a set of hourly water level observations from stations on the lower Columbia River. In all stations, the hindcast of S_TIDE is more accurate than NS_TIDE that is a powerful nonstationary tidal analysis tool adapted to river tides. The changing mean water level and tidal constituent properties obtained by S_TIDE are similar to those obtained by NS_TIDE, continuous wavelet transform, and empirical mode decomposition and highly consistent with theory on river tides. Moreover, different from NS_TIDE that only can be applied to river tides, enhanced harmonic analysis is free of dynamic content, assuming only known tidal frequencies. Therefore, S_TIDE can be applied to all kinds of nonstationary tides theoretically. Though powerful, S_TIDE also has some limitations: S_TIDE cannot be used for prediction and too many independent points in S_TIDE may induce computational memory overflow and unrealistic results.

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