Shao W., Chen J., Hu S., Yang Y., Jiang X., Shen W., Li H. (2024) Journal of Sea Research, 201, art. no. 102529 DOI: 10.1016/j.seares.2024.102529
ABSTRACT: The greatest purpose of this study is to analyze the importance of surface waves on the hindcasting of the oil spill through the Symphony wheel accident in the Qingdao coastal waters. During the accident period, a total of four synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images by Gaofen-3 (GF-3) were acquired from 2 to 19 May 2021. The hindcasting of two sea surface dynamics, namely currents and waves, is carried out using a coupled marine numeric model. This model, known as the finite-volume community ocean model-simulating waves nearshore (FVCOM-SWAVE), employs a triangular grid. Simulated significant wave height (SWH) is validated against remotely sensed product by the Haiyang-2B (HY-2B) altimeter on April 2021 yields a root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.38, a correlation coefficient (COR) of 0.78, and a scatter index (SI) of 0.34. Subsequently, Stokes drift estimated by waves are included to hindcasting oil spills using the oil particle-tracing method. The bias of the spatial coverage (SAR minus simulations) of an algorithm called the constant false alarm rate (CFAR) is −73.92 km2 with Stokes drift, which is significantly less than the 55.45 km2 coverage without Stokes drift. Moreover, compared with model-simulated oil spills, the bias of the geographic location at the center point with Stokes drift is 8.18 km, which is less than the 12.95 km bias without Stokes drift. These results demonstrate that Stokes drift needs to be included in the prediction of oil spills.