What can altimetry tell us about Rogue waves?
Image of the month - February 2004
"Rogue waves" are believed to be the cause of many accidents at sea. They are  mostly individual waves of exceptional height and/or abnormal shape which cannot  be detected with altimetry, as it averages measurements over several square  kilometers.
Studies were conducted [Toffoli et al., 2003] for the  European project MaxWave, to try and link the occurrence of such waves to some  sea state properties simulated by a wave model. Altimetry data from  Topex/Poseidon, Envisat and Jason-1 were then used to validate the results of  wave model simulation . These proved that for two-third of the shipwrecks  studied, the significant wave height was below 4 m. This means that if a ship  had an accident under those conditions, it is likely that rogue waves were  involved. 






                    
                    

			
			
			
			
			
			

