Abstract
Ocean wave spectra were retrieved from a set of ERS‐I synthetic aperture radar (SAR) wave mode (SWM) spectra between January 1993 and December 1995. An assessment is given of the SWM data quality and the retrieval performance as well as the operational feasibility of the retrieval algorithm. Sensitivity studies are performed to demonstrate the weak residual dependence of the retrieval on the first‐guess input spectrum. The mean spectral parameters of the SWM retrievals are compared with spectral parameters from collocated wave model (WAM) spectra. The time series of SWM‐retrieved and WAM‐derived monthly mean significant wave heights Hs in various ocean basins show good overall agreement but with a small systematic underestimation of Hs by the WAM. A decomposition of the wave spectra into wind sea and swell reveals an average 10% overprediction of the wind sea by the WAM while swell is underpredicted by 20–30%. The positive wind‐sea bias exhibits no clear wave height dependence, while the negative swell bias decreases with swell wave height. This could be due to a too strong damping in the WAM at low frequencies. Detailed regional investigations point to the existence of smaller‐scale phenomena, which may not be adequately reproduced by the WAM at the present resolution of the wind forcing. Finally, an intercomparison is made of the observed and modeled azimuthal cutoff length scales, and global distributions are investigated. Ratios of the observed azimuthal cutoff wavenumber to the mean azimuthal wavenumber component indicate that about 75% of the swell can be directly resolved by the SAR, while about 70% of the wind sea lies at least partially beyond the cutoff.
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