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Journal ArticleDOI

High-Frequency Radar Observations of Ocean Surface Currents

Jeffrey D. Paduan, +1 more
- 02 Jan 2013 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 1, pp 115-136
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TLDR
The discovery, development, and use of high-frequency (HF) radio wave backscatter in oceanography is reviewed, including search and rescue support and oil-spill mitigation in real time and larval population connectivity assessment when viewed over many years.
Abstract
This article reviews the discovery, development, and use of high-frequency (HF) radio wave backscatter in oceanography. HF radars, as the instruments are commonly called, remotely measure ocean surface currents by exploiting a Bragg resonant backscatter phenomenon. Electromagnetic waves in the HF band (3–30 MHz) have wavelengths that are commensurate with wind-driven gravity waves on the ocean surface; the ocean waves whose wavelengths are exactly half as long as those of the broadcast radio waves are responsible for the resonant backscatter. Networks of HF radar systems are capable of mapping surface currents hourly out to ranges approaching 200 km with a horizontal resolution of a few kilometers. Such information has many uses, including search and rescue support and oil-spill mitigation in real time and larval population connectivity assessment when viewed over many years. Today, HF radar networks form the backbone of many ocean observing systems, and the data are assimilated into ocean circulation models.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed sensing of microseisms and teleseisms with submarine dark fibers.

TL;DR: Observations of microseism, local surface gravity waves, and a teleseismic earthquake along a 4192-sensor ocean-bottom DAS array offshore Belgium are reported, suggesting significant potential of DAS in next-generation submarine seismic networks.
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Regional Ocean Data Assimilation

TL;DR: The past 15 years of developments in regional ocean data assimilation are reviewed, with exciting recent advances in ensemble and four-dimensional variational approaches.
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Cross-Shelf Exchange

TL;DR: There is a wide range of possible effects that can allow these critical transports, and different natural settings are often governed by different combinations of processes.
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Assessment of CODAR SeaSonde and WERA HF Radars in Mapping Surface Currents on the West Florida Shelf

TL;DR: In this article, three long-range (4.9 MHz) Coastal Ocean Dynamics Applications Radar (CODAR) SeaSonde and two median range (12.7 MHz) Wellen Radar (WERA) high-frequency (HF) radar systems are operated on the West Florida shelf for the purpose of observing surface currents.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Doppler Spectrum of Sea Echo at 13.56 Mc./s.

D. D. Crombie
- 01 Apr 1955 - 
TL;DR: The frequency of the principal component (as initially obtained by measurement of the length of individual cycles on the record) is surprisingly constant at about 0.38 c/s, irrespective of wind conditions and state of the sea as discussed by the authors.
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Near-Inertial Wave Propagation In Geostrophic Shear

TL;DR: In this article, an approximate dispersion relation for near-inertial internal waves propagating in geostrophic shear is formulated that includes straining by the mean flow shear.
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