Title: Model Simulation Studies of Hurricane Isabel in Chesapeake Bay
1Model Simulation Studies of Hurricane Isabel in
Chesapeake Bay
Jian Shen Virginia Institute of Marine
Sciences College of William and Mary
2Isabel The 100-Year Storm !
3Background of Storm Surge Modeling
- Numerical models have been successfully applied
to simulate and predict tide and storm surge in
coastal seas - SLOSH (Sea, Lake, and Overland Surges for
Hurricanes - ADCIRC (Advanced Circulation Model)
- Impact of the storm surge at any particular
location is sensitive to meteorological and
topographic parameters - Inundation is crucial for disaster planning
- Prediction of flooding areas depends on model
grid resolution
4New Challenges for Numerical Modeling
- More high resolution terrain data are available
- LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging)
- More real-time observation data are available
- Surface elevation
- Vertical velocity profile
- Wave
- Real-time simulation vs. prediction
- Rescue
- Inundation
- How to integrate high resolution terrain and
real-time observation data into models ?
5VIMS Real-Time Observation System
6Current Observation at Gloucester Point
7Airborne LIDAR Data
- LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging)
- Infrared laser ranger provides distance to ground
- Differential GPS provides aircraft location
- Inertial reference system provides aircraft
orientation - Post-processing provides x,y,z coordinates of
ground surface - Construction of Digital Elevation Models (DEMs)
8DTMS
3 Sec (80-90 m) DTM Vertical Res. 1 m
10 DTM Vertical Res. 0.3 m
9Example of LIDAR Data (Miami)
10Model Domain Representation
- Small domain is inadequate for storm simulation
- Coarse grid is inadequate to resolve irregular
shoreline and small topographic features in
estuary - Structured grid is difficult to represent complex
bathymetric in estuary - Unstructured grid has advantage of storm surge
modeling - Use nested grids
- Place fine grid in the areas of interest and
coarse grid in the remaining large areas
11Model Requirements
- Must resolve complex shoreline
- Must resolve land features
- coastal ridge, dam, inlet, and river
- small scale on the order of meters
- Must cover large modeling domain
- Must be computationally efficient
12Example of Unstructured Grid (Miami)
13Example of Nested Model Grids
14Unstructured 3D Model (UnTRIM)
- UnTRIM incorporates an Unstructured grid into
TRIM model (Tidal, Residual, Intertidal Mudflat),
originally developed by Vincenzo Casulli - It simulates three-dimensional hydrodynamic and
transport processes - It uses an orthogonal unstructured grid
- It conserves mass locally as well as globally
- It uses Eulerian-Langangian transport scheme
- It employs semi-implicit finite difference and
finite volume method- very efficient
computationally - It is capable of simulating wet-dry processes
15Grid Structure
- Use polygons to represent a prototype estuary
(3-, 4-, 5-sides) - Better fitting complicated geometry in estuarine
and coastal environment - Using orthogonal grid simplifies the numerical
algorithm
16Model Simulation Studies
- Study the accuracy of model prediction of Isabel
forced by a stationary, circular wind model - Compare model prediction with and without
simulating inundation - Study influence of open boundary condition
specification on surge simulation - still boundary condition vs. inverse pressure
adjust boundary condition - Study influence of model domain size on surge
prediction - Study influence of wind field on model prediction
- Study influence of hurricane on transport
-
17Model Grids
Surface elements 121,338
Surface elements 239,541
18Grid layouts at York and James Rivers
19Model Calibration
- Calibrate model for tide
- forced by 9 tidal constituents M2, S2, K1,
O1, Q1, K2, N2, M4, and M6 - Model was run for 3 months and the results of the
last 29 days were used for computing tidal
harmonics - Time step 5 min.
-
20Tidal Simulation (M2 tide)
21Tidal Simulation (K1)
22Observation Stations
23Tidal Constituents Comparison (Amplitude)
Amplitude is in m Observations are based on 1992
data
24Tidal Constituents Comparison (phase)
Phase is in degree
25Wind Model (Myers and Malkin, 1961)
- r the distance from the storm center
- p(r) pressure, pa central pressure,
- the inflow angle across circular isobar toward
the storm center - V is the wind speed, f Coriolis parameter,
- ks and kn are friction coefficients.
26Example of Wind Field
27Isabel Simulation ResultsWith and Without
Simulating inundation
28Comparison of Model ResultsWith and Without
Simulating Inundation
29Comparison of Model ResultsWith and Without
Simulating Inundation
30Test Influence of Open Boundary Condition
- Apply inverse pressure adjustment at BC
- Run large domain model (east coast) and apply
time series output from large domain model to
force small domain model
31Large Domain Model Simulation
32Influence of Open Boundary Condition
Inverse Pressure Adjustment
Nested Grids
33Influence of Wind Field
34Wind Field Analysis
35Comparison of Using Different Wind Fields
36Current Simulation at Gloucester Point
Model Wind Field
Modified Wind Field
37Conclusions
- Unstructured model is very efficient in
simulation tide and storm surge - Open boundary condition specification influences
the surge prediction - Wind field is critical in the accurate simulation
of storm surge
38Thanks !