An extra-tropical cyclone in the North
Atlantic in February 2011 provided the opportunity to study extreme
wind and wave conditions in the open ocean and the subsequent swell
field generated by a storm with extensive hurricane-force winds. In a
paper soon to be published in the Bulletin of the American
Meteorological Society
(Hanafin et al, 2012, in print), with many of the OceanFlux-GHG researchers as
co-authors, remarkable consistency was found between many different
satellite and land-based observations and numerical models,
considering the extreme conditions produced by this storm.
|
Annual average frequency of the low pressure centers with
hurricane-force winds based on the NOAA OPC 6-hourly surface pressure
analyses and QuikSCAT winds. The average was calculated based on data
from September though May 2002-2009. The track of Quirin at 6 hourly
intervals from 00Z on 13th February till 18Z on 14th February is
overplotted. The size of the circle symbol at each time step reflects
the surface area of winds
≥ 24.5 m/s and the
colour represents the maximum wind speed. |
The spatial extent of the areas
experiencing storm force and hurricane force winds compared very well
between satellite-borne scatterometers and NCEP (National Center for
Environmental Prediction) numerical model analysis fields. Wave
heights up to 20.1m were observed by altimeters during the storm,
which was the highest single measurement in a nine-year record, as
was the along-track average of 16.2m over 533km. A series of
hindcasts were run using the numerical wave model, WAVEWATCH-III ®,
forced with NCEP analysis wind fields and comparisons with altimeters
show that the model is capable of reproducing the extreme wave
heights observed in the open ocean.
|
Top: altimeter Hs
measured by 4 altimeters (Jason-1, Jason-2, ERS-2 and Envisat) on
February 13th (left panel) and February 14th
2011 (right panel). The black square in the left (right) panel
indicates the location of the most extreme sea states measured during
these two days by the Envisat (Jason-2) altimeter, respectively.
Middle:
Focus on the altimeter (black) Hs
values estimated along the Envisat (left) and Jason-2 (right) tracks
shown in figure 3 and indicated by the squares above,
and computed from the WW3 model forced by ECMWF (red), NCEP (green)
and NCEP+10% (blue) winds. A running average has been applied to the
altimeter data (~5km resolution) to better match the resolution of
the WW3 model (0.5°).
Bottom:
Wind speed from different sources interpolated on the
same Envisat (left) and Jason-2 (right) altimeter tracks. For both
panels, black (green) lines give the altimeter (NCEP) wind speed. For
the left (right) panel, the dashed red line gives the ASCAT
scatterometer (Jason-2 radiometer) wind speed. On the left panel, the
blue line gives the Oceansat-2 wind speed. All estimates have been
computed at the spatial resolution of the NCEP fields. The dashed
blue lines show the storm force (V ≥ 24.5 m/s) and hurricane-force
(V ≥ 32.7 m/s) wind thresholds. A
running average was again applied to the altimeter data to better
match the resolution of the other data sources (~25km).
|
The extreme conditions observed during
the storm generated swell of periods up to 25 seconds along the
coasts of western Europe. The
model hindcasts show that the model can also reproduce the swell
field generated by the storm very well, as the model results were
compared with ocean buoy data and seismic station observations around
the Atlantic basin in the days following the storm as the swell made
landfall. The time of arrival, the peak periods and the wave heights
of the modelled wave fields were in very good agreement with the buoy
and seismic station observations.
|
Top: Peak
periods
of
the
swell
field:
as
calculated
by
WW3; from
SAR
observations;
from wave
buoy
data;
and
from
seismic
buoy
data.
The
background
shows
the
output
from
the
model
at
12Z
on
the
15th,
as
the
longest
swells
were
encroaching
on
the
west
coast
of
Scotland.
The
square
symbols
represent
the
wave
buoy
data,
the
size
of
the
symbol
signifying
the
Hs
at
the
time
of
the
maximum
peak
period
observed
and
the
color
signifying
the
value
of
the
peak
period
at
this
time.
Beside
each
symbol
is
printed
the
time
of
arrival
of
the
maximum
peak
period
at
each
buoy.
The
circle
gives
the
location
of
the
SAR
observations
and
diamond
symbols
represent
the
seismic
stations,
also
colored
according
to
the
peak
periods
observed.
Bottom:
Time
series
of
the 3 hour median of the
vertical ground displacement variance averaged over 20 minutes, from
several stations around the North Atlantic, from February 14th
to 17th.
A timeseries of Hs
from a buoy (OLERON) located off the west coast of France is also
shown.
|
The
Atlantic
extra-tropical
storm
Quirin
produced,
on
14th
February
2011,
wave
heights
that
are
expected
to
occur
only
about
once
a
year
over
the
globe,
according
to
our
hindcast
results.
Over a 12-year hindcast period, this storm ranked 3rd largest in
terms of significant wave height in the North Atlantic. Waves
from
the
center
of
the
storm
radiated
as
swell
with
very
long
periods,
from
20
to
25
s,
and
were
recorded
around the
northern
and
eastern
Atlantic
basin.
Although
the
maximum
values
for
wind
and
wave
estimates
are
difficult
to
validate,
the
evidence
presented
in
this
study
gives
credence
to
the
observed
scales
over
which
hurricane-force
winds
and
sea
state
developed.
Once
the
forcing
wind
field
was
adjusted
to
better
match
the
satellite
observations,
a
numerical
wave
model
performed
very
well
in
reproducing
the
local
sea
state
and
swell
field
around
the
basin,
given
the
extreme
input
conditions.
We are encouraged by these results to report that our ability
to both model and observe extreme wave events has improved greatly in
recent years, while a novel look at century-old seismic records will
help refine the climatology of such rare events.
No comments:
Post a Comment