Correlated Increase of High Ocean Waves and Winds in the Ice-Free Waters of the Arctic Ocean

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Abstract

The long-term trend of extreme ocean waves in the emerging ice-free waters of the summer Arctic is studied using ERA-Interim wave reanalysis, with validation by two drifting wave buoys deployed in summer 2016. The 38-year-long reanalysis dataset reveals an increase in the expected largest significant wave height from 2.3 m to 3.1 m in the ice-free water from the Laptev to the Beaufort Seas during October. The trend is highly correlated with the expected increase in highest wind speed from 12.0 m/s to 14.2 m/s over the ice-free ocean, and less so with the extent of the ice-free water. Since the storms in this area did not strengthen throughout the analysis period, the increase in the expected largest significant wave height follows from the enhanced probability of storms in ice-free waters, which is pertinent to the estimation of extreme sea conditions along the Northern Sea Route.

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Waseda, T., Webb, A., Sato, K., Inoue, J., Kohout, A., Penrose, B., & Penrose, S. (2018). Correlated Increase of High Ocean Waves and Winds in the Ice-Free Waters of the Arctic Ocean. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-22500-9

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