Giant
waves
more
than
a
myth
Satellites
show
legendary
ten-story
ship-sinkers
really
exist
Posted
July
21
Courtesy
European
Space
Agency
Once
dismissed
as
a
nautical
myth,
freakish
ocean
waves
that
rise
as
tall
as
ten-storey
apartment
blocks
have
been
accepted
as
a
leading
cause
of
large
ship
sinkings.
Results
from
the
European
Space
Agency's
ERS
satellites
helped
establish
the
widespread
existence
of
these
'rogue'
waves
and
are
now
being
used
to
study
their
origins.
Severe
weather
has
sunk
more
than
200
supertankers
and
container
ships
exceeding
200
metres
in
length
during
the
last
two
decades.
Rogue
waves
are
believed
to
be
the
major
cause
in
many
such
cases.
Mariners
who
survived
similar
encounters
have
had
remarkable
stories
to
tell.
In
February
1995
the
cruiser
liner
Queen
Elizabeth
II
met
a
29-metre
high
rogue
wave
during
a
hurricane
in
the
North
Atlantic
that
Captain
Ronald
Warwick
described
as
"a
great
wall
of
water
it
looked
as
if
we
were
going
into
the
White
Cliffs
of
Dover."
And
within
the
week
between
February
and
March
2001
two
hardened
tourist
cruisers
the
Bremen
and
the
Caledonian
Star
had
their
bridge
windows
smashed
by
30-metre
rogue
waves
in
the
South
Atlantic,
the
former
ship
left
drifting
without
navigation
or
propulsion
for
a
period
of
two
hours.
"The
incidents
occurred
less
than
a
thousand
kilometres
apart
from
each
other,"
said
Wolfgang
Rosenthal
-
Senior
Scientist
with
the
GKSS
Forschungszentrum
GmbH
research
centre,
located
in
Geesthacht
in
Germany
-
who
has
studied
rogue
waves
for
years.
"All
the
electronics
were
switched
off
on
the
Bremen
as
they
drifted
parallel
to
the
waves,
and
until
they
were
turned
on
again
the
crew
were
thinking
it
could
have
been
their
last
day
alive.
"The
same
phenomenon
could
have
sunk
many
less
lucky
vessels:
two
large
ships
sink
every
week
on
average,
but
the
cause
is
never
studied
to
the
same
detail
as
an
air
crash.
It
simply
gets
put
down
to
'bad
weather'."
Offshore
platforms
have
also
been
struck:
on
1
January
1995
the
Draupner
oil
rig
in
the
North
Sea
was
hit
by
a
wave
whose
height
was
measured
by
an
onboard
laser
device
at
26
metres,
with
the
highest
waves
around
it
reaching
12
metres.
Objective
radar
evidence
from
this
and
other
platforms
radar
data
from
the
North
Sea's
Goma
oilfield
recorded
466
rogue
wave
encounters
in
12
years
-
helped
convert
previously
sceptical
scientists,
whose
statistics
showed
such
large
deviations
from
the
surrounding
sea
state
should
occur
only
once
every
10000
years.
The
fact
that
rogue
waves
actually
take
place
relatively
frequently
had
major
safety
and
economic
implications,
since
current
ships
and
offshore
platforms
are
built
to
withstand
maximum
wave
heights
of
only
15
metres.
In
December
2000
the
European
Union
initiated
a
scientific
project
called
MaxWave
to
confirm
the
widespread
occurrence
of
rogue
waves,
model
how
they
occur
and
consider
their
implications
for
ship
and
offshore
structure
design
criteria.
And
as
part
of
MaxWave,
data
from
ESA's
ERS
radar
satellites
were
first
used
to
carry
out
a
global
rogue
wave
census.
"Without
aerial
coverage
from
radar
sensors
we
had
no
chance
of
finding
anything,"
added
Rosenthal,
who
headed
the
three-year
MaxWave
project.
"All
we
had
to
go
on
was
radar
data
collected
from
oil
platforms.
So
we
were
interested
in
using
ERS
from
the
start."
ESA's
twin
spacecraft
ERS-1
and
2
launched
in
July
1991
and
April
1995
respectively
both
have
a
Synthetic
Aperture
Radar
(SAR)
as
their
main
instrument.
The
SAR
works
in
several
different
modes;
while
over
the
ocean
it
works
in
wave
mode,
acquiring
10
by
5
km
'imagettes'
of
the
sea
surface
every
200
km.
These
small
imagettes
are
then
mathematically
transformed
into
averaged-out
breakdowns
of
wave
energy
and
direction,
called
ocean-wave
spectra.
ESA
makes
these
spectra
publicly
available;
they
are
useful
for
weather
centres
to
improve
the
accuracy
of
their
sea
forecast
models.
"The
raw
imagettes
are
not
made
available,
but
with
their
resolution
of
ten
metres
we
believed
they
contained
a
wealth
of
useful
information
by
themselves,"
said
Rosenthal.
"Ocean
wave
spectra
provide
mean
sea
state
data
but
imagettes
depict
the
individual
wave
heights
including
the
extremes
we
were
interested
in.
"ESA
provided
us
with
three
weeks'
worth
of
data
around
30,000
separate
imagettes
selected
around
the
time
that
the
Bremen
and
Caledonian
Star
were
struck.
The
images
were
processed
and
automatically
searched
for
extreme
waves
at
the
German
Aerospace
Centre."
Despite
the
relatively
brief
length
of
time
the
data
covered,
the
MaxWave
team
identified
more
than
ten
individual
giant
waves
around
the
globe
above
25
metres
in
height.
"Having
proved
they
existed,
in
higher
numbers
than
anyone
expected,
the
next
step
is
to
analyse
if
they
can
be
forecasted,"
Rosenthal
added.
"MaxWave
formally
concluded
at
the
end
of
last
year
although
two
lines
of
work
are
carrying
on
from
it
one
is
to
improve
ship
design
by
learning
how
ships
are
sunk,
and
the
other
is
to
examine
more
satellite
data
with
a
view
to
analysing
if
forecasting
is
possible."
A
new
research
project
called
WaveAtlas
will
use
two
years
worth
of
ERS
imagettes
to
create
a
worldwide
atlas
of
rogue
wave
events
and
carry
out
statistical
analyses.
The
Principal
Investigator
is
Susanne
Lehner,
Associate
Professor
in
the
Division
of
Applied
Marine
Physics
at
the
University
of
Miami,
who
also
worked
on
MaxWave
while
at
DLR,
with
Rosental
a
co-investigator
on
the
project.
"Looking
through
the
imagettes
ends
up
feeling
like
flying,
because
you
can
follow
the
sea
state
along
the
track
of
the
satellite,"
Lehner
said.
"Other
features
like
ice
floes,
oil
slicks
and
ships
are
also
visible
on
them,
and
so
there's
interest
in
using
them
for
additional
fields
of
study.
"Only
radar
satellites
can
provide
the
truly
global
data
sampling
needed
for
statistical
analysis
of
the
oceans,
because
they
can
see
through
clouds
and
darkness,
unlike
their
optical
counterparts.
In
stormy
weather,
radar
images
are
thus
the
only
relevant
information
available."
So
far
some
patterns
have
already
been
found.
Rogue
waves
are
often
associated
with
sites
where
ordinary
waves
encounter
ocean
currents
and
eddies.
The
strength
of
the
current
concentrates
the
wave
energy,
forming
larger
waves
Lehner
compares
it
to
an
optical
lens,
concentrating
energy
in
a
small
area.
This
is
especially
true
in
the
case
of
the
notoriously
dangerous
Agulhas
current
off
the
east
coast
of
South
Africa,
but
rogue
wave
associations
are
also
found
with
other
currents
such
as
the
Gulf
Stream
in
the
North
Atlantic,
interacting
with
waves
coming
down
from
the
Labrador
Sea.
However
the
data
show
rogue
waves
also
occur
well
away
from
currents,
often
occurring
in
the
vicinity
of
weather
fronts
and
lows.
Sustained
winds
from
long-lived
storms
exceeding
12
hours
may
enlarge
waves
moving
at
an
optimum
speed
in
sync
with
the
wind
too
quickly
and
they'd
move
ahead
of
the
storm
and
dissipate,
too
slowly
and
they
would
fall
behind.
"We
know
some
of
the
reasons
for
the
rogue
waves,
but
we
do
not
know
them
all,"
Rosenthal
concluded.
The
WaveAtlas
project
is
scheduled
to
continue
until
the
first
quarter
of
2005.