Abstract

AbstractThis study presents the most comprehensive set of in situ and remote sensing measurements of wave number, and hence the dispersion relation, in ice to date. A number of surface‐following buoys were deployed in sea ice from the R/V Sikuliaq, which also hosted an X‐band marine radar, during the ONR Arctic Sea State field experiment. The heave‐slope‐correlation method was used to estimate the root‐mean‐square wave number from the buoys. The method was highly sensitive to noise, and extensive quality control measures were developed to isolate real signals in the estimated wave number. The buoy measurements were complemented by shipboard marine X‐band radar dispersion measurements, which are limited to lower frequencies (<0.32 Hz). Overall, deviation from the linear open water dispersion relation was not significant, and matched the open water relation nearly exactly for the range 0.10–0.30 Hz. Isolating a subset of data during the strongest wave event showed evidence of increased wave numbers at frequencies greater than 0.30 Hz. The ice conditions and deviation from linear open water dispersion were qualitatively consistent with predictions from the mass loading model. However, the dispersion curves did not exactly follow the contours of the mass loading model, suggesting either measurement error or other processes at play.

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