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Statistical modelling of tropical cyclones’ longevity after landfall in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Kamal Kumar SahaKamal Kumar Saha, Saleh Wasimi
Most of the devastations caused by a tropical cyclone occur on land, and therefore, its longevity after landfall is of critical importance. Published literature identifies many factors including inland environmental characteristics that influence this longevity as well as power dissipation rate. These have been studied in this research in the context of tropical cyclones that hit Australian coasts during the period 1984-2010. For obvious reasons, tropical cyclones which manifested recurrence or multiple landfalls have been excluded. After applying several statistical tools to the observed data, it has been found, from the list of variables identified in literature related to tropical cyclones, that storm intensity at landfall, translation speed, relative humidity, surface temperature, upper level divergence, and surface roughness exhibited statistical significance. However, stepwise regression retained only surface roughness and central pressure which yielded a coefficient of determination of 76 percent during calibration and 59 percent during validation with 60%/40% split in data. The influence of surface roughness is well understood, but as yet, no consistent metric for the purpose of tropical cyclones’ propagation exists, and therefore, this paper introduces a method of assigning surface roughness based on terrain characteristics.

History

Volume

65

Issue

3-4

Start Page

376

End Page

386

Number of Pages

11

ISSN

1836-716X

Location

Australia

Publisher

Bureau of Meteorology

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Australian meteorological and cceanographic journal.

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