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Dive into the research topics where Peter Sutherland is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Sutherland.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Ocean waves across the Arctic: Attenuation due to dissipation dominates over scattering for periods longer than 19 s

Fabrice Ardhuin; Peter Sutherland; M Doble; Peter Wadhams

The poorly understood attenuation of surface waves in sea ice is generally attributed to the combination of scattering and dissipation. Scattering and dissipation have very different effects on the directional and temporal distribution of wave energy, making it possible to better understand their relative importance by analysis of swell directional spreading and arrival times. Here we compare results of a spectral wave model – using adjustable scattering and dissipation attenuation formulations – with wave measurements far inside the ice pack. In this case, scattering plays a negligible role in the attenuation of long swells. Specifically, scattering-dominated attenuation would produce directional wave spectra much broader than the ones recorded, and swell events arriving later and lasting much longer than observed. Details of the dissipation process remain uncertain. Average dissipation rates are consistent with creep effects but are 12 times those expected for a laminar boundary layer under a smooth solid ice plate.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Airborne remote sensing of ocean wave directional wavenumber spectra in the marginal ice zone

Peter Sutherland; Jean-Claude Gascard

Interactions between surface waves and sea ice are thought to be an important, but poorly understood, physical process in the atmosphere-ice-ocean system. In this work, airborne scanning lidar was used to observe ocean waves propagating into the marginal ice zone (MIZ). These represent the first direct spatial measurements of the surface wave field in the polar MIZ. Data were compared against two attenuation models, one based on viscous dissipation and one based on scattering. Both models were capable of reproducing the measured wave energy. The observed wavenumber dependence of attenuation was found to be consistent with viscous processes, while the spectral spreading of higher wavenumbers suggested a scattering mechanism. Both models reproduced a change in peak direction due to preferential directional filtering. Floe sizes were recorded using co-located visible imagery, and their distribution was found to be consistent with ice breakup by the wave field.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Strong and highly variable push of ocean waves on Southern Ocean sea ice

Justin E. Stopa; Peter Sutherland; Fabrice Ardhuin

Significance Southern Ocean sea ice plays a key role in regulating the uptake of carbon and heat by the global ocean. In this context, ocean waves have a strong influence, including ice break-up and pancake formation. These processes explain large differences in sea-ice properties between Arctic and Antarctic. Waves also decay in the ice, exerting a force in their propagation direction that compacts the ice. Here, we provide an extensive dataset on wave heights and its decay in sea ice, using satellite imagery. Wave decay can be much faster than previously reported but is highly variable. The resulting wave force on the ice can have a profound impact on both ice extent and thickness. Sea ice in the Southern Ocean has expanded over most of the past 20 y, but the decline in sea ice since 2016 has taken experts by surprise. This recent evolution highlights the poor performance of numerical models for predicting extent and thickness, which is due to our poor understanding of ice dynamics. Ocean waves are known to play an important role in ice break-up and formation. In addition, as ocean waves decay, they cause a stress that pushes the ice in the direction of wave propagation. This wave stress could not previously be quantified due to insufficient observations at large scales. Sentinel-1 synthetic aperture radars (SARs) provide high-resolution imagery from which wave height is measured year round encompassing Antarctica since 2014. Our estimates give an average wave stress that is comparable to the average wind stress acting over 50 km of sea ice. We further reveal highly variable half-decay distances ranging from 400 m to 700 km, and wave stresses from 0.01 to 1 Pa. We expect that this variability is related to ice properties and possibly different floe sizes and ice thicknesses. A strong feedback of waves on sea ice, via break-up and rafting, may be the cause of highly variable sea-ice properties.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2018

Observations of Near-Surface Current Shear Help Describe Oceanic Oil and Plastic Transport

Nathan J. M. Laxague; Tamay M. Özgökmen; Brian K. Haus; Guillaume Novelli; Andrey Y. Shcherbina; Peter Sutherland; Cedric M. Guigand; Björn Lund; Sanchit Mehta; Matias Alday; Jeroen Molemaker

Plastics and spilled oil pose a critical threat to marine life and human health. As a result of wind forcing and wave motions, theoretical and laboratory studies predict very strong velocity variation with depth over the upper few centimeters of the water column, an observational blind spot in the real ocean. Here we present the first-ever ocean measurements of the current vector profile defined to within 1 cm of the free surface. In our illustrative example, the current magnitude averaged over the upper 1 cm of the ocean is shown to be nearly four times the average over the upper 10 m, even for mild forcing. Our findings indicate that this shear will rapidly separate pieces of marine debris which vary in size or buoyancy, making consideration of these dynamics essential to an improved understanding of the pathways along which marine plastics and oil are transported.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Overview of the Arctic Sea State and Boundary Layer Physics Program

Jim Thomson; Stephen F. Ackley; Fanny Girard-Ardhuin; Fabrice Ardhuin; Alexander V. Babanin; Guillaume Boutin; John M. Brozena; Sukun Cheng; Clarence O. Collins; M Doble; Christopher W. Fairall; Peter S. Guest; Claus P. Gebhardt; Johannes Gemmrich; Hans C. Graber; Benjamin Holt; Susanne Lehner; Björn Lund; Michael H. Meylan; Ted Maksym; Fabien Montiel; William Perrie; Ola Persson; Luc Rainville; W. Erick Rogers; Hui Shen; Hayley H. Shen; Vernon A. Squire; Justin E. Stopa; Madison Smith

A large collaborative program has studied the coupled air‐ice‐ocean‐wave processes occurring in the Arctic during the autumn ice advance. The program included a field campaign in the western Arctic during the autumn of 2015, with in situ data collection and both aerial and satellite remote sensing. Many of the analyses have focused on using and improving forecast models. Summarizing and synthesizing the results from a series of separate papers, the overall view is of an Arctic shifting to a more seasonal system. The dramatic increase in open water extent and duration in the autumn means that large surface waves and significant surface heat fluxes are now common. When refreezing finally does occur, it is a highly variable process in space and time. Wind and wave events drive episodic advances and retreats of the ice edge, with associated variations in sea ice formation types (e.g., pancakes, nilas). This variability becomes imprinted on the winter ice cover, which in turn affects the melt season the following year.


Ocean Science Discussions | 2018

A Surface KInematics Buoy (SKIB) for wave-current interactionsstudies

Pedro Veras Guimarães; Fabrice Ardhuin; Peter Sutherland; Mickael Accensi; M. Hamon; Yves Perignon; Jim Thomson; Alvise Benetazzo; Pierre Ferrant

Global navigation satellite systems (GNSSs) and modern motion-sensor packages allow the measurement of ocean surface waves with low-cost drifters. Drifting along or across current gradients provides unique measurements of wave–current interactions. In this study, we investigate the response of several combinations of GNSS receiver, motionsensor package and hull design in order to define a prototype “surface kinematics buoy” (SKIB) that is particularly optimized for measuring wave–current interactions, including relatively short wave components that are important for air–sea interactions and remote-sensing applications. The comparison with existing Datawell Directional Waverider and Surface Wave Instrument Float with Tracking (SWIFT) buoys, as well as stereo-video imagery, demonstrates the performance of SKIB. The use of low-cost accelerometers and a spherical ribbed and skirted hull design provides acceptable heave spectra E(f ) from 0.09 to 1 Hz with an acceleration noise level (2πf )4E(f ) close to 0.023 m2 s−3. Velocity estimates from GNSS receivers yield a mean direction and directional spread. Using a low-power acquisition board allows autonomous deployments over several months with data transmitted by satellite. The capability to measure currentinduced wave variations is illustrated with data acquired in a macro-tidal coastal environment.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Airborne Remote Sensing of Wave Propagation in the Marginal Ice Zone

Peter Sutherland; John M. Brozena; W. Erick Rogers; M Doble; Peter Wadhams


Ocean Engineering | 2018

Stereo imaging and X-band radar wave data fusion: An assessment

Alvise Benetazzo; Francesco Serafino; Filippo Bergamasco; Giovanni Ludeno; Fabrice Ardhuin; Peter Sutherland; Mauro Sclavo; Francesco Barbariol


Archive | 2018

Data archive from the "Sea State and Boundary Layer Physics of the Emerging Arctic Ocean" program

Jim Thomson; Stephen F. Ackley; Fanny Girard-Ardhuin; Alexander V. Babanin; Guillaume Boutin; John M. Brozena; Sukun Cheng; Clarence O. Collins; Martin J. Doble; Christopher W. Fairall; Peter S. Guest; Claus P. Gebhardt; Johannes Gemmrich; Hans C. Graber; Benjamin Holt; Susanne Lehner; Björn Lund; Michael H. Meylan; Ted Maksym; Fabien Montiel; William Perrie; Ola Persson; Luc Rainville; W. Erick Rogers; Hui Shen; Hayley H. Shen; Vernon A. Squire; S Stammerjohn; Justin E. Stopa; Madison Smith


Geophysical Research Letters | 2018

Observations of Near-Surface Current Shear Help Describe Oceanic Oil and Plastic Transport: VERY NEAR SURFACE CURRENT SHEAR

Nathan J. M. Laxague; Tamay M. Özgökmen; Brian K. Haus; Guillaume Novelli; Andrey Y. Shcherbina; Peter Sutherland; Cedric M. Guigand; Björn Lund; Sanchit Mehta; Matias Alday; Jeroen Molemaker

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M Doble

University of Cambridge

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Jim Thomson

University of Washington

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John M. Brozena

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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W. Erick Rogers

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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