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A Hurricane Boundary Layer and Wind Field Model for Use in Engineering Applications

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TLDR
In this paper, the radial dependence of the height of the maximum wind speed in a hurricane, which is found to lower with increasing inertial stability (which in turn depends on increasing wind speed and decreasing radius) near the eyewall, is examined.
Abstract
This article examinesthe radial dependence of the height of the maximum wind speed in a hurricane, which is found to lower with increasing inertial stability (which in turn depends on increasing wind speed and decreasing radius) near the eyewall. The leveling off, or limiting value, of the marine drag coefficient in high winds is also examined. The drag coefficient, given similar wind speeds, is smaller for smaller-radii storms; enhanced sea sprayby short or breaking waves is speculatedas a cause. Afitting technique of dropsonde wind profiles is used to model the shape of the vertical profile of mean horizontal wind speeds in the hurricane boundary layer, using only the magnitude and radius of the ‘‘gradient’’ wind. The method slightly underestimates the surface winds in small but intense storms, but errors are less than 5% near the surface. The fit is then applied to a slab layer hurricane wind field model, and combined with a boundary layer transition model to estimate surface winds over both marine and land surfaces.

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The Economic Growth Impact of Hurricanes: Evidence from U.S. Coastal Counties

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate the impact of hurricane strikes on local economic growth rates and construct a novel hurricane destruction index that is based on a monetary loss equation, local wind speed estimates derived from a physical wind field model, and local exposure characteristics.
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A Revised Model for Radial Profiles of Hurricane Winds

TL;DR: In this paper, a revision to the Holland parametric approach to modeling the radial profile of winds in hurricanes is presented, using information readily available from hurricane archives or in hurricane warning information and the profile can be readily incorporated into existing parametric models of the hurricane surface wind field.
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Wind and waves in extreme hurricanes

TL;DR: The authors show that at high wind speeds white caps remain constant and at still higher wind speeds are joined, and increasingly dominated, by streaks of foam and spray, forming a white out, and the roughness begins to decrease and a high-velocity surface jet begins to develop.
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Air-Sea Enthalpy and Momentum Exchange at Major Hurricane Wind Speeds Observed during CBLAST

TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of six missions from the 2003 Coupled Boundary Layers Air-Sea Transfer (CBLAST) field program in major hurricanes Fabian and Isabel using a new variational technique was conducted using a near-surface mean drag coefficient CD of 2.4 × 10−3 with a 46% standard deviation and a mean enthalpy coefficient CK of 1.0 × 1...
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Hurricane hazard modeling: The past, present, and future

TL;DR: An overview of the past and present work in hurricane modeling can be found in this paper, where the authors discuss the evolution and current state of wind field modeling, modeling uncertainties, and possible future directions of the hurricane risk modeling process.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Open Ocean Momentum Flux Measurements in Moderate to Strong Winds

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of the dissipation and Reynolds flux results shows excellent agreement on average, for wind speeds from 4 to 20 m s−1, for a modified Gill propeller-vane anemometer was used to measure the velocity.
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An Analytic Model of the Wind and Pressure Profiles in Hurricanes

TL;DR: In this paper, an analytic model of the radial profiles of sea level pressure and winds in a hurricane is presented, which is shown to be generally superior to two other widely used models and is considered to be a valuable aid in operational forecasting and case studies.
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Reduced drag coefficient for high wind speeds in tropical cyclones

TL;DR: It is found that surface momentum flux levels off as the wind speeds increase above hurricane force, contrary to surface flux parameterizations that are currently used in a variety of modelling applications, including hurricane risk assessment and prediction of storm motion, intensity, waves and storm surges.
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The HRD real-time hurricane wind analysis system

TL;DR: The HRD real-time wind analysis system is currently undergoing evaluation in the operational forecasting environment of the National Hurricane Center (NHC) and is an object-oriented, distributed, three-tiered client-server application as mentioned in this paper.
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