Abstract

Hurricane risk characteristics are examined across the U. S. Gulf of Mexico coastline using a hexagonal tessellation. Using an extreme value model, parameters are collected representing the rate or λ (frequency), the scale or σ (range), and the shape or ξ (intensity) of the extreme wind distribution. These latent parameters and the 30-year return level are visualized across the grid. The greatest 30-year return levels are located toward the center of the Gulf of Mexico, and for inland locations, along the borders of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. Using a geographically weighted regression model, the relationship of these parameters to sea surface temperature (SST) is found to assess sensitivity to change. It is shown that as SSTs increase near the coast, the frequency of hurricanes in these grids decrease significantly. This reinforces the importance of SST in areas of likely tropical cyclogenesis in determining the number of hurricanes near the coast, along with SSTs along the lifespan of the storm, rather than simply local SST. The range of hurricane wind speeds experienced near Florida is shown to increase with increasing SSTs (insignificant), suggesting that increased temperatures may allow hurricanes to maintain their strength as they pass over the Florida peninsula. The modifiable areal unit problem is assessed using multiple grid sizes. Moran’s I and the local statistic G are calculated to examine spatial autocorrelation in the parameters. This research opens up future questions regarding rapid intensification and decay close to the coast and the relationship to changing SSTs.

Highlights

  • Hurricanes are tropical weather events capable of causing extreme destruction on land

  • The results show that the parameters vary across space. λ is highest in the middle of the Gulf, σ is greatest south of Texas, ξ varies dramatically due to the role an extreme value can play on the model, and the 30-year return level is highest south of Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi

  • The generalized Pareto distribution used in our study describes wind above a certain threshold and is theoretically more suited to estimate the most extreme wind speed values

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Hurricanes are tropical weather events capable of causing extreme destruction on land. Since the active North Atlantic season of 2005, research on the risk of hurricane events has been at the forefront of atmospheric disciplines. 15 hurricanes formed, one being the infamous Hurricane Katrina. Katrina caused at least $108 billion worth of property damage and was by far the costliest hurricane to ever strike the United States [1]. S. landfall in Louisiana, the damage was felt far beyond that. Storm surge penetrated more than 6 miles inland in coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, 42

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call