Douglas sea scale

The Douglas sea scale is a scale which measures the height of the waves and also measures the swell of the sea.

The scale is very simple to follow and is expressed in one of 10 degrees.

The Douglas sea scale, also called the "international sea and swell scale", was devised in 1921[1] by Captain H. P. Douglas, who later became vice admiral Sir Percy Douglas and hydrographer of the Royal Navy.

Its purpose is to estimate the roughness of the sea for navigation.

[2] The Degree (D) value has an almost linear dependence on the square root of the average wave Height (H) above, i.e.,

Using linear regression on the table above, the coefficients can be calculated for the low Height values (

Then the Degree can be approximated as the average between the low and high estimations, i.e.:

is the optional rounding to the closest integer value.

Without the rounding to integer, the root mean square error of this approximation is: