Publication | Open Access
A High-Resolution Coupled Riverine Flow, Tide, Wind, Wind Wave, and Storm Surge Model for Southern Louisiana and Mississippi. Part I: Model Development and Validation
435
Citations
31
References
2009
Year
Storm SurgeEngineeringStorm Surge ModelHydrologic EngineeringCoastal ModelingFlood ControlCoastal HydrodynamicsWind EngineeringEarth ScienceNumerical Weather PredictionStorm DynamicsWind WaveWave AnalysisNumerical ModellingMeteorologyGeographyWeather DisasterHurricane Storm SurgeWind Turbine ModelingSouthern LouisianaCoastal ProcessesHydrologyHydrological DisasterCivil EngineeringMeteorological ForcingFlood Risk ManagementFlooded Area
Abstract A coupled system of wind, wind wave, and coastal circulation models has been implemented for southern Louisiana and Mississippi to simulate riverine flows, tides, wind waves, and hurricane storm surge in the region. The system combines the NOAA Hurricane Research Division Wind Analysis System (H*WIND) and the Interactive Objective Kinematic Analysis (IOKA) kinematic wind analyses, the Wave Model (WAM) offshore and Steady-State Irregular Wave (STWAVE) nearshore wind wave models, and the Advanced Circulation (ADCIRC) basin to channel-scale unstructured grid circulation model. The system emphasizes a high-resolution (down to 50 m) representation of the geometry, bathymetry, and topography; nonlinear coupling of all processes including wind wave radiation stress-induced set up; and objective specification of frictional parameters based on land-cover databases and commonly used parameters. Riverine flows and tides are validated for no storm conditions, while winds, wind waves, hydrographs, and high water marks are validated for Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
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