Abstract
Drifting buoy observations in Hurricane Idalia (2023) are used to
investigate the dependence of ocean surface wave mean square slope on
wind, wave, and storm characteristics. Mean square slope has a primary
dependence on wind speed that is linear at low-to-moderate wind speeds
and approaches saturation at high wind speeds (> 20 m s-1).
Inside Hurricane Idalia, buoy-measured mean square slopes have a
secondary dependence on wind-wave alignment: at a given wind speed,
slopes are higher where wind and waves are aligned compared to where
wind and waves are crossing. At moderate wind speeds, differences in
mean square slope between aligned and crossing conditions can vary 10%
to 15% relative to their mean. The dependence on wind-wave alignment is
robust up to 30 m s-1, but can be obscured at the highest wind speeds
near the center of the storm where wind and wave directions change
rapidly.
These changes in wave slopes may be related to the reported dependence
of air-sea drag coefficients on wind-wave alignment.