Spatial variations in the Caspian Sea wave climate in 2002-2013 from satellite altimetry
Nadezhda Kudryavtseva, Kuanysh Kussembayeva, Zaure B. Rakisheva, Tarmo, Soomere

TL;DR
This study analyzes satellite altimetry data from 2002-2013 to characterize the spatial and temporal variations in wave climate across the Caspian Sea, revealing significant regional changes linked to wind patterns.
Contribution
It provides a detailed satellite-based assessment of wave height variations and their regional trends in the Caspian Sea, validated against in situ measurements.
Findings
Average wave height varies regionally from 0.5 to 1.8 m.
Wave heights decreased significantly in certain basin segments.
Extreme wave heights show large interannual variability without clear trends.
Abstract
The core properties of the wave climate and its changes in the Caspian Sea are established in terms of the annual mean significant wave height and its regional changes in 2002-2013 based on the outcome of the satellite altimetry mission JASON-1. Remotely estimated wave heights are validated against properties of the empirical distribution of instrumentally measured wave heights in the southern Caspian Sea and monthly averages of visually observed wave heights at three locations. A correction for systematic differences leads to very good correspondence between monthly averaged in situ and satellite data with a typical root mean square difference of 0.06 m. The average significant wave height in the Caspian Sea is 0.5-0.7 m in the northern basin of the sea, around 1.2 m in large parts of the central and southern basins and reaches up to 1.8 m in the northern segment of the central basin.…
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