Meteotsunami forecasting: Sensitivities demonstrated by the 2008 Boothbay, Maine, event

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Abstract

To support development of a meteotsunami forecasting capability for the USA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration funded a project in 2011 focused on meteotsunami forecasting for the US east coast. Meteotsunami forecasting shares many similarities with traditional tsunami forecasting, though the characterization and integration of the source with numerical forecast models is much different. Given meteotsunami source characterization through atmospheric observations and models, it is conceivable that meteotsunami alerts could be issued and their impact forecasted using existing tsunami forecast models with high-resolution coastal definition. To test this, the 2008 Boothbay, Maine, meteotsunami is simulated using an atmospheric source consisting of a moving pressure disturbance coupled with a tsunami forecast model. Sensitivities of the modeled impact to the source characteristics, such as speed, wavelength, and direction, are also tested. Results show that the observed impact can be re-created through numerical modeling when the pressure disturbance period is roughly matched with the harbor resonance and observed meteotsunami period.

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Whitmore, P., & Knight, B. (2015). Meteotsunami forecasting: Sensitivities demonstrated by the 2008 Boothbay, Maine, event. In Meteorological Tsunamis: The U.S. East Coast and Other Coastal Regions (pp. 11–23). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-12712-5_2

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