Modeling and Parameter Estimation of Hurricane Wind Fields with Asymmetry

Author:

Chang Derek1,Amin Saurabh2,Emanuel Kerry3

Affiliation:

1. Center for Computational Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Institute for Data, Systems, and Society, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

3. Program in Atmospheres, Oceans, and Climate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Abstract

AbstractThis article presents an azimuthally asymmetric gradient hurricane wind field model that can be coupled with hurricane-track models for engineering wind risk assessments. The model incorporates low-wavenumber asymmetries into the maximum wind intensity parameter of the Holland et al. wind field model. The amplitudes and phases of the asymmetries are parametric functions of the storm-translation speed and wind shear. Model parameters are estimated by solving a constrained, nonlinear least squares (CNLS) problem that minimizes the sum of squared residuals between wind field intensities of historical storms and model-estimated winds. There are statistically significant wavenumber-1 asymmetries in the wind field resulting from both storm translation and wind shear. Adding the translation vector to the wind field model with wavenumber-1 asymmetries further improves the model’s estimation performance. In addition, inclusion of the wavenumber-1 asymmetry resulting from translation results in a greater decrease in modeling error than does inclusion of the wavenumber-1 shear-induced asymmetry. Overall, the CNLS estimation method can handle the inherently nonlinear wind field model in a flexible manner; thus, it is well suited to capture the radial variability in the hurricane wind field’s asymmetry. The article concludes with brief remarks on how the CNLS-estimated model can be applied for simulating wind fields in a statistically generated ensemble.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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