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CHAPTER 5: PREDICTING STORM SURGE LESSONS FROM HURRICANE IKE
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OVERVIEW Introduction Storm Surge Modeling ADCIRC Case Study: The Ike Dike
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INTRODUCTION Hurricanes inflict damage through wind, rainfall, tornadoes, and surge Storm Surge - an offshore rise of water associated with a low pressure weather system, caused by High winds Low Pressure Bathymetry (Underwater Topography)
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INTRODUCTION Storm surges cause the most damage Seawalls, levees, dikes, and bulkheads all protect against storm surge Before modeling systems, storm surge prediction was based solely on historical data Very inaccurate
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STORM SURGE MODELING Predicting storm surge depends on a multitude of factors. Wind speed Wave-current interaction Tides Atmospheric pressure Riverine flows Rainfall Topography Bathymetry
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STORM SURGE MODELING Computer simulations are based on these factors Allow modelers to forecast various storm surges Use models to test structural and non-structural mitigations (Levees, wetlands, etc.) Build and/or utilize the most impactful mitigation Houston flood simulation
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STORM SURGE MODELING Coastal communities have high risk for damaging surge Storm surge modeling can forecast in real time Helps decision makers identify and evacuate at risk populations well in advance
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AD VANCED CIRC ULATION ( ADCIRC ) SLOSH - Sea, Land, and Overland Surges from Hurricanes model Computer based modeling system Developed in the 1960’s Based on pressure, size, track, forward speed, and wind speed. Allows forecasters to estimate potential surge with 20% accuracy
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ADVANCED CIRCULATION (ADCIRC) LIDAR – Light Detection and Ranging Data collected by sensor that emits high frequency laser through the bottom of an aircraft Sensor records time difference between emission and return of the laser signal to determine elevation Data applied to storm surge model for more accurate predictions SLOSH is still dependent on track of hurricane If hurricane does not follow projected path, all predictions are useless
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ADVANCED CIRCULATION (ADCIRC) ADCIRC Model originally developed to study effect of a catastrophic storm on southern Louisiana. High-res model of Louisiana coast expanded after Katrina to Mississippi and Alabama, and now Texas Constant current updates Used by Army Core of Engineers, National Civil Engineering Laboratory, and many others ASGS – ADCIRC Surge Guidance System Predictive tool for storms Used in conjunction with SLOSH
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MODELING WITH ADCIRC Storm surge height is not directly related to windspeed Surge can not be predicted from category of storm alone Hurricane Camille (1969) Category 5 In 2005, residents who were safe from Camille did not evacuate for Katrina (category 3) Katrina had a much more severe surge
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MODELING WITH ADCIRC Wind forcing Causes water in front of the storm to pile up on its self Atmospheric pressure Surface water exposed to low pressure will rise 0.39 inches rise in sea level per 1 millibar drop in pressure Currents Energy of a breaking wave exponentially related to current
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MODELING WITH ADCIRC Rainfall Increases riverine flow which increases water depth at outlets Bathymetry Shallower waters by the coast cause higher surge LIDAR advanced modeling Tidal dynamics High or low tide Wet or dry shoreline Ike made landfall at high tide
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CASE STUDY: THE IKE DIKE ADCIRC applications Evacuation planning Potential damage assesment Proposed structural mitigation testing The Ike Dike Dike proposed to reduce storm surge post hurricane Ike Used ADCIRC to develop and test
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CASE STUDY: IKE DIKE Path of hurricane Ike along with storm surge elevation
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CASE STUDY: IKE DIKE Landfall point scenarios for evaluation
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CASE STUDY: IKE DIKE Ike path and “worst-case” Ike path
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CASE STUDY: IKE DIKE Original storm surge elevation Projected storm surge elevation
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CASE STUDY: IKE DIKE Storm surge elevation without Ike Dike Storm surge elevation with Ike Dike
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