Estimating hurricane wind structure in the absence of aircraft reconnaissance

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Abstract

New objective methods are introduced that use readily available data to estimate various aspects of the two-dimensional surface wind field structure in hurricanes. The methods correlate a variety of wind field metrics to combinations of storm intensity, storm position, storm age, and information derived from geostationary satellite infrared (IR) imagery. The first method estimates the radius of maximum wind (RMW) in special cases when a clear symmetric eye is identified in the IR imagery. The second method estimates RMW, and the additional critical wind radii of 34-, 50-, and 64-kt winds for the general case with no IR scene-type constraint. The third method estimates the entire two-dimensional surface wind field inside a storm-centered disk with a radius of 182 km. For each method, it is shown that the inclusion of infrared satellite data measurably reduce error. All of the methods can be transitioned to an operational setting or can be used as a postanalysis tool. © 2007 American Meteorological Society.

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Kossin, J. P., Knaff, J. A., Berger, H. I., Herndon, D. C., Cram, T. A., Velden, C. S., … Hawkins, J. D. (2007). Estimating hurricane wind structure in the absence of aircraft reconnaissance. Weather and Forecasting, 22(1), 89–101. https://doi.org/10.1175/WAF985.1

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