ve field Wave Direction(deg)
are two
and 225
leg, the T of Japan Ce
s shows
> deg is
tion is
and 90 Tokumitu ley
3/8 of Cot d
ded that am "^" Frequency(Hz) e
m 06 Fig.7 The wave number spectrum distribution of e
he simulated wave of Fig.5 in the wave Matto
ng Wave direction-frequency space =
ineering
4. MARINE RADAR OBSERVATION
RESULT AND DISCUSSION
The marine radar site was shown in Fig.8 and Fig.8 The marine radar site
Fig.9. We observed the target area on Jan.5-6,
1995, when the most highest wave was observed
by the wave observational system of in situ data
by Ministry of Construction Japan at the same
area as Fig.8. The PPI image was converted by
A/D convertor and saved into the computer for
analysis.
Fig.10 shows the result of comparison between p
wave direction by marine radar and the in sits
data. From this result the wave direction is same
as in situ data except the case pre-processed by
Hanning window only. Another two case filtered
radar by moving average have good correlation to the
observed data.
And Fig.11 shows the result of comparison | un 1
| between wave frequency and in situ data. This
50.0
1500m
1000m
\ Offshore Breakwater
=
Tokumitu Coast
shows the frequency observed by marine radar is Se ani
larger than the data from in situ data. ppm :
The error depends on the reason that we use
M small amplitude wave theory on translating from
spatial f requency monitored by marine radar to :
üme series frequency. Translation from spatial Fig.9 Theobservatonal arca
frequency to time series frequency is a big
500 problem on wave theory. Making allowance for
the reason mentioned above, we find that it is
accurate enough for operational use.
50.0
bution of
Kx-Ky
255
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B7. Vienna 1996