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Mystery of monster waves solved
Electronic Telegraph ^ | January 6, 2002 | By Tony Paterson in Berlin

Posted on 01/05/2002 6:49:34 PM PST by aculeus

GERMAN scientists claim to have explained the mystery behind so-called monster waves - the term given by oceanographers for near-vertical breaking seas up to 120ft high. Such seas are thought to have sunk more than 200 supertankers and container ships without trace during the past two decades.

Often dismissed as sailors' yarns, monster waves have terrified seafarers for centuries and provided the raw material for countless novels and films including Sebastian Junger's recent best-seller The Perfect Storm.

Yet until now scientists and oceanographers had been unable to determine exactly what formed such gigantic "one-off" seas that are capable of breaking a 600ft-long ship in half and sending it to the bottom within seconds.

A team of oceanographers at the Technical University in Berlin has now managed to explain the phenomenon with the aid of computers and by simulating monster waves in a tank.

"Our wave experiments have proved for the first time that monster waves are physically possible and that they really do exist," said Prof Gunther Clauss, who led the team of scientists.

"This represents a breakthrough for the shipping and oil industries because we can now start to design structures that can cope with these monsters," he added.

Using a computerised, hydraulically powered wave-making machine in a specially designed tank supplied by oceanographers at Hanover University, Prof Clauss's team has established that monster waves can occur with little or no warning.

The waves are created in a storm when slow-moving waves are caught up by a succession of faster waves travelling at more than twice their speed. "What happens then is that the waves simply pile up on top of each other to create a monster," said Prof Clauss.

"The result is an almost vertical wall of water which towers up to 120ft in height before collapsing on itself. Any vessel caught by one of these has little chance of surviving."

Photographs of the experiments show the monster wave building into a vertical wall of water before exploding into an uncontrollable boiling mass as it collapses on itself.

"Even in the tank the effect was awe-inspiring," said Prof Clauss. "The exploding wave was so powerful that it broke through the ceiling of the building in which the tank is located," he added.

Monster waves are thought to have caused the loss of at least 200 "super carriers" or ships measuring more than 600ft in length on the world's oceans over the past 20 years. The unexplained disappearance of many smaller vessels including trawlers and yachts could put the total number of losses much higher.

Yet accounts by seamen who have witnessed such waves are comparatively rare. One, dating from 1995, was when the QE2 was hit by a hurricane on a crossing to New York.

She survived what was estimated to be a 95ft high wave which the ship took directly over her bow. Her captain, Ronald Warwick, described the phenomenon as "like going into the White Cliffs of Dover".

One of the few small-boat sailors to survive a monster wave was the British yachtsman, Brigadier Miles Smeeton, who did so twice. His 50ft ketch, Tzu Hang was dismasted twice by such waves while attempting to round Cape Horn in the 1950s - once after being "pitchpoled", toppled stern over bow.

In Germany, the horrors of monster waves have been brought right up to date after revelations about the near-sinking of the German Antarctic cruise liner Bremen in the south Atlantic last year. The ship with 137 passengers aboard was hit by a 114ft wave in March while heading towards make Rio de Janiero after an Antarctic cruise.

The impact smashed windows on the bridge and cut the ship's electricity supply. The vessel drifted engineless for more than half an hour heeling at an angle of 40 degrees in huge seas whipped by hurricane-strength winds.

"I have been at sea for 48 years, but never have I experienced such a wave," said the Bremen's captain, Heinz Aye, 65, who is now retired.

Prof Clauss said that his team's research would help naval architects in their efforts to construct ships and oil platforms that were capable of withstanding such freak wave forces.

"In many cases it is as simple as building a bridge on a ship that is not slab-sided but rounded, so it can cope with being hit by a monster wave. Most ships plying the oceans right now are not built along these lines," he said.

The team also hopes that its research will help in the development of radar that is specifically designed to warn of sea conditions that could produce the monster-wave phenomenon.

"This could help the captains of ships to steer clear of a danger area, but the truth is we can do nothing to prevent monster waves. They are a product of nature," Prof Clauss added.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: monsterwaves; perfectwave; roguewave; roguewaves; techindex; tsunami; tsunamis
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To: holman
About 6 years ago I was able to tour the Carl Vinson. The petty officer in charge of the anchors told me that on their last tour she took blue water over the flight deck. The deck is 95 feet over the water when fully loaded. Musta been one heck of a ride.
21 posted on 01/05/2002 7:25:51 PM PST by mad_as_he$$
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To: Pistolshot
LOL!
22 posted on 01/05/2002 7:26:38 PM PST by Texas_Jarhead
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To: Pistolshot
My God! Is that an old shot of Rush in drag?
23 posted on 01/05/2002 7:26:50 PM PST by Grut
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To: Texas_Jarhead
The Soviets/CIS have a torpedo that supposedly bursts underneath an aircraft carrier to create a 'keel-breaking' gap effect. One of the CIS sold some to the Chinese...

Recall a story about the QE2 being hit bow on one night by a wave created by a hurricane hundreds of miles away. I think they said the height was 90 feet, given the fact that it hit the bridge.

Miraculously, no one was on deck at the time, before, or after. Of course, some things were missing, others things bent.

24 posted on 01/05/2002 7:29:08 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: aculeus
"Yet until now scientists and oceanographers had been unable to determine exactly what formed such gigantic "one-off" seas that are capable of breaking a 600ft-long ship in half and sending it to the bottom within seconds. "

NUTS! I read about concoidal-rogue waves in Scientific American back in the 1970's.

25 posted on 01/05/2002 7:31:19 PM PST by beerhead
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To: Pistolshot
Is that Rosie O'Donnell???
26 posted on 01/05/2002 7:34:22 PM PST by WriteOn
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To: nunya bidness
I would be happy to never see a wave over 20' high ever in my life.

Before this new theory came out, I always worried about the fast storm which changes the wind direction radically in 10-20 hours, leaving a set of (say) 30 foot waves crossing a set of 20' waves at about 90*, creating big crazy waves and super deep troughs with no warning. "Fastnet Force Ten" from 1979 or the "Queen Anne's Storm" between NZ and Fiji a few years ago are two famous examples we have read about.

27 posted on 01/05/2002 7:35:56 PM PST by Travis McGee
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To: aculeus
I wouldn't even have thought a total of 200 ships would've sunk in the past 20 years!

MM

28 posted on 01/05/2002 7:37:56 PM PST by MississippiMan
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To: Pistolshot
Ok, so I was drinking a'bit, and we went out to my car for a while, but seriously, she's a very nice.
29 posted on 01/05/2002 7:41:49 PM PST by Leisler
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To: unix
I saw some amazing sh*t on LSD, too.

But no waves.

30 posted on 01/05/2002 7:43:23 PM PST by Yeti
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To: aculeus
Wave theory always seemed so common sense. Waves building on waves. Any sailor has seen this happen at least on a small scale. I have been in calm open sea and have watched a 30 foot swell travel across from no where, and have been in 15 foot swells when a single 20-30 foot breaker washes by.
31 posted on 01/05/2002 7:45:18 PM PST by PatrioticAmerican
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To: aculeus
Interesting that this comes on the heels of a recent article offering a mathematical explanation for why buses seem to arrive in clumps rather than evenly spaced. The explanation was that, if a bus ever had any reason to slow down, then additional passengers would accumulate at stops in front of it so that it would slow down even more at each successive stop. Furthermore, the gap between this bus and the one behind it would decrease so that the second bus would see fewer passengers at each stop. Hence the second bus would start accelerating at the same time that the first bus was slowing down, until the two buses were practically on top of each other.

A similar thing must happen with waves.

32 posted on 01/05/2002 7:45:44 PM PST by AZLiberty
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To: Yeti
Hehe...I always laugh when I think the Navy named a class of ship LSD...
33 posted on 01/05/2002 7:46:22 PM PST by Michael Barnes
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To: aculeus
Sailed from MA to Gibraltar on a 44' sailboat this past summer ... my seventh trans-Atlantic crossing. All the other crossings were on US Navy ships. I've survived gale force winds and one hurricane while at sea ... and fortunately have been spared a so called "killer wave". All of the major storms I've experienced at sea were on large ships.
Thank you Lord.
34 posted on 01/05/2002 7:46:27 PM PST by BluH2o
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To: aculeus
I don't know about the numbers. But giant waves sinking ships (not without a trace), has been well documented. I find the whole thing fascinating for some reason.
35 posted on 01/05/2002 7:50:28 PM PST by goodieD
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To: Travis McGee
I agree. Waves worry me less than opposing lows banging in to each other and gaining strength.

I was out on the Chesapeake last week and the measly 5 footers were kicking our ass.

Remember that Bay chop? It's still there.

36 posted on 01/05/2002 7:51:56 PM PST by nunya bidness
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To: aculeus
I would have gotten away with it if it wasn't for those meddling kids.
37 posted on 01/05/2002 7:57:47 PM PST by Dakmar
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To: goodieD
Years ago there was a story in NY Times magazine about a marine insurance investigator who was hired to find out what happened to some very large bulk carriers. Turned out the bottoms were too weak( thin ) and it was later thought they unzipped in ten seconds or so. Not enough time to get a broadcast out. Had nothing to do with weather. Was a function of thin steel and corrosive cargo in the holds mixing with saltwater. The boats were only 2-3 years old and it happened to 2-3 of a class. No survivors.
38 posted on 01/05/2002 8:00:54 PM PST by Leisler
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To: unix
200 miles off of Hatteras on a 67' aluminum ketch, we hit a container in a nasty white squall and sunk 30 hours later.

The Coasties pulled us off after trying to tow the boat.

39 posted on 01/05/2002 8:01:43 PM PST by nunya bidness
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To: ofMagog
I saw this on cable awhile back.
40 posted on 01/05/2002 8:02:00 PM PST by razorback-bert
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