Refraction of swell by surface currents
Basile Gallet, William R. Young

TL;DR
This study uses modern buoy data and satellite-derived surface currents to investigate how wave refraction by currents causes apparent source location errors, or mirages, in long-range swell propagation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that mesoscale surface currents significantly refract swell, explaining historical mirages and failures in backtracking wave sources.
Findings
Mesoscale vorticity deflects swell from great-circle paths.
Directional fluctuations are caused by multipath arrivals.
Refraction explains observed mirages and source mislocations.
Abstract
Using recordings of swell from pitch-and-roll buoys, we have reproduced the classic observations of long-range surface wave propagation originally made by Munk et al. (1963) using a triangular array of bottom pressure measurements. In the modern data, the direction of the incoming swell fluctuates by about on a time scale of one hour. But if the incoming direction is averaged over the duration of an event then, in contrast with the observations by Munk et al. (1963), the sources inferred by great-circle backtracking are most often in good agreement with the location of large storms on weather maps of the Southern Ocean. However there are a few puzzling failures of great-circle backtracking e.g., in one case, the direct great-circle route is blocked by the Tuamoto Islands and the inferred source falls on New Zealand. Mirages like this occur more frequently in the…
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