• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Devastating “Rogue Waves” Finally Have An Explanation

September 12, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

For hundreds of years, sailors have reported freak, gigantic waves hundreds of feet high, and seemingly appearing out of nowhere. Hundreds of leagues from land, or any other witnesses, they would swallow up ships whole, only rarely leaving a survivor or two to tell the tale. 

But, well, sailors have said a lot of stuff over the years. Mermaids that turned out to be dugongs; monstrous sea snakes that are later found to be whale dicks; after a while, you’re going to stop taking these stories at face value and maybe start putting it down to a little too much tapping the Admiral. After all, it was well-known by the 19th century that waves couldn’t physically exceed about 30 feet in height – far more likely, then, was that these “sightings” of so-called “rogue waves” were either exaggerations or imaginations.

Then, on New Year’s Day 1995, the sailors were proven right. A huge, 84-foot wave crashed into the Draupner oil platform in the Norwegian North Sea, bigger and more destructive than any the designers had thought to prepare for. 

“It confirmed what seafarers had described for centuries,” said Francesco Fedele, associate professor Georgia Tech’s School of Civil and Environmental Engineering and lead author of a new paper detailing how rogue waves are created, in a statement this week. “They always talked about these waves that appear suddenly and are very large – but for a long time, we thought this was just a myth.”

But just confirming the existence of rogue waves was one thing – actually explaining them? That was quite another. Existing models of wave formation and interaction didn’t seem to suffice; new suggestions – concepts like nonlinear focusing and modulational instability – were “mainly accurate when the waves are confined within channels, like in lab experiments,” Fedele argued, “where energy can only flow in one direction.” 

“In the open ocean, though, energy can spread in multiple directions,” he said – which is why he and his team took a different approach. Rather than starting with the math, they looked at 18 years’ worth of wave records – a total of 27,500 from 18 years of data – and tried to find the evidence.

What they found stood in contrast to the most common explanation for rogue waves – that of modulational instability, where a slight deviation in a wave gets amplified by nonlinear effects. What they found instead was a combination of two factors: linear focusing, where waves traveling at different speeds and in different directions happen to align and combine into a single taller wave; and second-order bound nonlinearities – natural effects that distort the shape of a wave, making it up to 20 percent taller.

Add all that to the natural nonlinear behavior of the ocean itself, and the result is, every so often, a huge and destructive rogue wave.

“Rogue waves follow the natural orders of the ocean – not exceptions to them. This is the most definitive, real-world evidence to date,” Fedele explained. “They’re extreme, but they’re explainable.”

The results stand as more than just a vindication of Fedele’s skepticism. Updating ocean forecasting models to account for this explanation is “fundamental,” he argued, to ensure “the safety of ship navigation, coastal structures, and oil platforms. They have to be designed to endure these extreme events.”

Now, with updated models and a view to extend the results to machine learning, using the data to train algorithms to predict rogue waves before they occur, life at sea may soon be safer – albeit perhaps a little less supernatural in reputation.

“Rogue waves are, simply, a bad day at sea,” Fedele concluded. “They are extreme events, but they’re part of the ocean’s language.” 

“We’re just finally learning how to listen.”

The paper is published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Russia moves Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets to Belarus to patrol borders, Minsk says
  2. French senators to visit Taiwan amid soaring China tensions
  3. Thought Unicorns Don’t Exist? Turns Out They Live In A Chinese Cave
  4. Moon’s Magnetic Field Experienced Mysterious Resurgence 2.8 Billion Years Ago Before Disappearing

Source Link: Devastating "Rogue Waves" Finally Have An Explanation

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Watch Orcas Use “Tonic Immobility” To Suck An Enormous Liver Out Of The World’s Deadliest Shark
  • Ancient Micronesians Hunted Sharks 1,800 Years Ago, And Now We Know Which Species
  • World’s First Plasma “Fireballs” Help Explain Supermassive Black Hole Mystery
  • Why Do We Eat Chicken, And Not Birds Like Seagull And Swan?
  • How To Find Fossils? These Bright Orange Organisms Love Growing On Exposed Dinosaur Bones
  • Strange Patterns In Ancient Rocks Reveal Earth’s Tumbling Magnetic Field, Not Speeding Continents
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Can Now Be Seen From Earth – Even By Amateur Telescopes!
  • For 25 Years, People Have Been Living Continuously In Space – But What Happens Next?
  • People Are Not Happy After Learning How Horses Sweat
  • World’s First Generational Tobacco Ban Takes Effect For People Born After 2007
  • Why Was The Year 536 CE A Truly Terrible Time To Be Alive?
  • Inside The Myth Of The 15-Meter Congo Snake, Cryptozoology’s Most Outlandish Claim
  • NASA’s Voyager Spacecraft Found A 30,000-50,000 Kelvin “Wall” At The Edge Of Our Solar System
  • “Dueling Dinosaurs” Fossil Confirms Nanotyrannus As Own Species, Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Back From Behind The Sun, And Much More This Week
  • This Is What Antarctica Would Look Like If All Its Ice Disappeared
  • Bacteria That Can Come Back From The Dead May Have Gone To Space: “They Are Playing Hide And Seek”
  • Earth’s Apex Predators: Meet The Animals That (Almost) Can’t Be Killed
  • What Looks And Smells Like Bird Poop? These Stinky Little Spiders That Don’t Want To Be Snacks
  • In 2020, A Bald Eagle Murder Mystery Led Wildlife Biologists To A Very Unexpected Culprit
  • Jupiter-Bound Mission To Study Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS From Deep Space This Weekend
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version