Large waves and drifting buoys in the Southern Ocean

Abstract In February 2017, a wave buoy was deployed in the Southern Ocean, south of New Zealand at 52°45.71′S, 169°02.54′E. For 170 days, the moored buoy transmitted spectral and time domain observations, including measurements during a storm with a particularly large individual wave of 19.4-m crest-to-trough height. We present a detailed analysis of this storm and the measured and modelled spectra, also considering the probability of the occurrence of single large waves. After 170 days, the buoy broke free of its mooring and started drifting eastwards, still transmitting the essential data, thereby providing a unique opportunity to examine large wave events and their corresponding spectral conditions in the Southern Ocean on both moored and free-drifting platforms. The results are discussed quantitatively.

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