A New Algorithm Could Protect Ships From 'Rogue Waves' (cio.com) 62
itwbennett writes: MIT researchers have developed a tool they say can predict so-called rogue waves, giant waves that seem to appear out of nowhere and can cause devastation to ships unlucky enough to be struck by them. The researchers found that certain wave groups end up 'focusing' or exchanging energy in a way that eventually leads to a rogue wave. The tool they developed uses an algorithm that sifts through data from surrounding waves and computes a probability that a particular wave group will turn into a rogue wave within the next few minutes.
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It appears that this is a new algorithm, that's the terminology. Regardless of any audio history, the algorithm wasn't known prior. It is now known. Thus, we call it new.
In my humble opinion, it's not new. It has always been there. It has just been uncovered, discovered, inferred, revealed, or whatever. The algorithm doesn't care if we know about it or not. It just exists. However, that's a rather long-winded way to express it and will likely confuse the folks on the short bus. So, "new" is gonna have to do
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I suppose that, by some definition, you discovered it too.
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i wish there was technology to protect against rogue youtube links that are dumb and posted by dumb people who complained about getting their dumb link out twice when if they had done it 0 times it would be less dumb.
morons.
Ocean-going ground-effect aircraft (Score:2)
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In a condition where rogue waves may appear, this "ground" is simply lacking between waves and the aircraft would probably nose-dive into the next wave.
I guess the Russians don't believe you (Score:2)
Because they built this beastie
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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That looks like a link to the Caspian Sea Monster. IIRC, that was from the 1960s. Rogue Waves weren't well understood at the time because very few had observed them and lived to tell about them. I seem to recall having learned that, until not that long ago, they were believed to not even be real but exaggerated stories from fisherman and sketchy sailors.
I dunno what you know about them but I know that I know very little about them other than what I've seen in a couple of documentaries. So, unless you know s
Rogue waves (Score:3, Funny)
Beware of well wishers that do not know anyone on the boat as it leaves.
This causes great confusion. Legitimate wavers are overlooked as passengers divert their gaze to the rogue and miss a last chance farewell.
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Nah man, rogue waves are just a part of thieves cant.
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This is the part that I don't get: How is this algorithm supposed to "Protect" the ship. Sounds like only thing it can do is predict that one will be forming.
If so, how can a ship possibly survive such a gigantic wave even if it knows it is coming? Would this algorithm even predict what direction it is coming from? I recall that I heard somewhere that a best way to cross a wave is to go at it on a 45 degree angle. Not sure where I read that...
Surely we have slashdoters that have great knowledge of seafaring
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When waves interact they generate an interference pattern. The interference pattern will have larger up and downs than the original waves. However, it might not be obvious to a ship that they are in such an interference pattern, as locally the sea looks like waves. Depending on the path of the boat, shortly before the peak of the interference pattern, you may see an unusually quiet region. I could see how it would get a mariner confused.
What I never understood was if rogue waves were caused by interfer
Wave mechanics is hard, too, but doable. (Score:2)
This is the part that I don't get: How is this algorithm supposed to "Protect" the ship. Sounds like only thing it can do is predict that one will be forming.
If so, how can a ship possibly survive such a gigantic wave even if it knows it is coming?
There are several candidates for rogue wave generation. In most of them (such as multi-wave focus and in-phase combination of several wave components of different frequencies) the rogue wave is very limited, especially in duration. (A possible exception is a non
English Is Difficult (Score:3)
Wreck? Rude?
Wreak. Ride.
Aside from your atrocious spelling, your facts are false and misleading. Not all ships are large enough to withstand 10 meter waves. No ship can "deal with any storm the ocean can throw at it". The size of the wave makes a big difference, regardless of slope. If a large wave crests and comes down on you you're fucked. It a large wave hits you at a bad angle, you're fucked.
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Wreck? Rude?
Wreak. Ride.
Aside from your atrocious spelling, ...
It a large wave hits you at a bad angle, you're fucked.
Yeah man, it a large wave, I agree.
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Me not sure.
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The f got flipped upside down.
By a large wave.
The next few minutes? (Score:2)
The "next few minutes" is basically just enough time to give the "abandon ship" order. To be useful the algorithm has to predict the rogue wave far enough in advance to let the ship turn and steam clear of the wave group. In a storm, that's probably 20-30 minutes which I don't see happening any time soon.
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Re:The next few minutes? (Score:5, Informative)
Depends on the wave and the ship, but just turning the ship so it faces directly into the wave can be sufficient to greatly mitigate damage in a lot of cases. Being hit by an unexpected large wave broadside is typically worse than hitting it head-on, especially by reducing the risk of capsizing.
That's actually been successfully done at least once [nytimes.com] even with current technology: the captain of a cruise ship in 1998 spotted a 90-foot (27-meter) rogue wave on radar, and turned the ship to face it head-on, avoiding serious damage.
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"You can't run your ship into an iceberg anymore, the radar is just too good," he said. "It would have to manned by a complete idiot."
It would have to manned indeed. Got a chuckle out of that one.
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Rogue wave or not, captains want to steer their ship into the wave as it's the only way to get through the water safely. Waves hitting broadside is asking for a capsize. Engine failure during a storm is considered a
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The "next few minutes" is basically just enough time to give the "abandon ship" order.
Just enough time to switch to GEICO.
Ogg say, better just to separate saucer section. Bad news for cheap tickets.
Ogg think is not size of ship but shape and area above water make target for wave energy. Ogg duck under water, why cannot ship? Ship need water tightness on top but that just good sense. Silly people stack containers to sky on hippo boat make Ogg angry, just break apart and fill ocean with rubber ducks. Hippo boat has good side and bad side. Ogg think ducks. They bob. Bob bob and little duck head
Wishful thinking (Score:1)
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"Rouge waves".....sounds like a fashion trend.
Nautical Drone Network (Score:2)
Drone measures "rogue wave" -> Generates radio wave -> warns ship.
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Rogue waves travel fast, the one they've actually recorded was doing 45mph. They also can appear from a direction different from the prevailing swell. To cover a perimeter large enough to give advance warning (10 minutes?), you need a lot of drones.
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Take a look at the graph for time-domain signals in OFDM and rogue wave plots. They look almost identical.
That's because OFDM approaches the full use of the available bandwidth for information transport. The closer you get to that, the more your signal looks like random noise.
Quantum mechanics link? (Score:1)
I have a vague recollection of some mathematical link being postulated between rogue waves and some aspects of quantum mechanics.
Anyone know what that might have been?
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Water waves don't have solitons
Sure they do. The second figure in the Wikipedia article on solitons [wikipedia.org] is a water-wave soliton: a sine wave with a sech() envelope.
That's just a solution with mild nonlinearity. As the waves become more extreme there is more nonlinearity, and thus more opportunity for such
It Won't Help (Score:1)
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Side of a ship: long and vertical.
Bow (that's the front): Narrow and pointy.
It makes a difference where you get hit. Have you ever even seen a boat, let alone been in one?
This is pretty clever (Score:2)
So instead of taking the arithmetic appr
Goodvibes (Score:1)
The captain will want to know about this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]