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Are Forecasts of the Tropical Cyclone Radius of Maximum Wind Skillful?

Benjamin C. Trabing, Andrew B. Penny, Jonathan Martinez, Cody Fritz

2024Geophysical Research Letters11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The radius of maximum wind (RMW) defines the location of the maximum winds in a tropical cyclone and is critical to understanding intensity change as well as hazard impacts. A comparison between the Hurricane Analysis and Forecast System (HAFS) models and two statistical models based off the National Hurricane Center official forecast is conducted relative to a new baseline climatology to better understand whether models have skill in forecasting the RMW of North Atlantic tropical cyclones. On average, the HAFS models are less skillful than the climatology and persistence baseline and two statistically derived RMW estimates. The performance of the HAFS models is dependent on intensity with better skill for stronger tropical cyclones compared to weaker tropical cyclones. To further improve guidance of tropical cyclone hazards, more work needs to be done to improve forecasts of tropical cyclone structure.

Topics & Concepts

Tropical cycloneTropical cyclone forecast modelClimatologyTropical cyclone rainfall forecastingEnvironmental scienceCyclone (programming language)MeteorologyWind speedTropical cyclone scalesTropical cyclogenesisMaximum sustained windGeographyWind directionGeologyComputer scienceField-programmable gate arrayComputer hardwareWind gradientTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
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