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The Record-Breaking 1933 Atlantic Hurricane Season

TLDR
The 1933 Atlantic hurricane season was extremely active, with 20 named storms and 11 hurricanes including 6 major (category 3+; 1-min maximum sustained winds ≥ 96 kt) hurricanes occurring.
Abstract
The 1933 Atlantic hurricane season was extremely active, with 20 named storms and 11 hurricanes including 6 major (category 3+; 1-min maximum sustained winds ≥96 kt) hurricanes occurring. The 1933 hurricane season also generated the most accumulated cyclone energy (an integrated metric that accounts for frequency, intensity, and duration) of any Atlantic hurricane season on record. A total of 8 hurricanes tracked through the Caribbean in 1933—the most on record. In addition, two category 3 hurricanes made landfall in the United States just 23 h apart: the Treasure Coast hurricane in southeast Florida followed by the Cuba–Brownsville hurricane in south Texas. This manuscript examines large-scale atmospheric and oceanic conditions that likely led to such an active hurricane season. Extremely weak vertical wind shear was prevalent over both the Caribbean and the tropical Atlantic throughout the peak months of the hurricane season, likely in part due to a weak-to-moderate La Niña event. These favorable dynamic conditions, combined with above-normal tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures, created a very conducive environment for hurricane formation and intensification. The Madden–Julian oscillation was relatively active during the summer and fall of 1933, providing subseasonal conditions that were quite favorable for tropical cyclogenesis during mid- to late August and late September to early October. The current early June and August statistical models used by Colorado State University would have predicted a very active 1933 hurricane season. A better understanding of these extremely active historical Atlantic hurricane seasons may aid in anticipation of future hyperactive seasons.

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The Devil Is in the Tail Dependence: An Assessment of Multivariate Copula‐Based Frameworks and Dependence Concepts for Coastal Compound Flood Dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined applications of multivariate copula-based time series models using data observed during Hurricane Irma (2017) along the coastlines of Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Devil Is in the Tail Dependence: An Assessment of Multivariate Copula‐Based Frameworks and Dependence Concepts for Coastal Compound Flood Dynamics

TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined applications of multivariate copula-based time series models using data observed during Hurricane Irma (2017) along the coastlines of Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, United States.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Practical Guide to Wavelet Analysis.

TL;DR: In this article, a step-by-step guide to wavelet analysis is given, with examples taken from time series of the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO).
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of a 40–50 Day Oscillation in the Zonal Wind in the Tropical Pacific

TL;DR: In this paper, a very pronounced maximum was noted in the co-spectrum of the 850- and 150-mb zonal wind components in the frequency range 0.0245-0.0190 day−1 (41-53 days period).
Journal ArticleDOI

Description of Global-Scale Circulation Cells in the Tropics with a 40–50 Day Period

TL;DR: In this article, a long time series (5-10 years) of station pressure and upper air data from stations located in the tropics are subjected to spectral and cross-spectral analysis to investigate the spatial extent of a previously detected oscillation in various variables with a period range of 40-50 days.
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