A recent increase in global wave power as a consequence of oceanic warming
Universidad de Cantabria · University of California, Santa Cruz · +1 more institution
Abstract
Wind-generated ocean waves drive important coastal processes that determine flooding and erosion. Ocean warming has been one factor affecting waves globally. Most studies have focused on studying parameters such as wave heights, but a systematic, global and long-term signal of climate change in global wave behavior remains undetermined. Here we show that the global wave power, which is the transport of the energy transferred from the wind into sea-surface motion, has increased globally (0.4% per year) and by ocean basins since 1948. We also find long-term correlations and statistical dependency with sea surface temperatures, globally and by ocean sub-basins, particularly between the tropical Atlantic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.08
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 83
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Global warming
- Power (physics)
- Heat wave
- Environmental science
- Climate change
- Geology
- Oceanography
- Physics