Evaluating statistical significance of tropical cyclone forward speed on
storm surge and wave generation: retrospective analysis of best track,
wave, and tidal data in Japan
Abstract
Over the past several decades, scientists have focused on numerical
sensitivity analysis to explain the relative importance of tropical
cyclone (TC) forward speed on storm surge and wave height predictions.
These past studies performed numerical analyses, but the results have
not been sufficiently compared with long term observations. In this
study, 42 years of tidal records and landfall TC best tracks in Japan
were analyzed, demonstrating that TC pre-landfall forward speed is
significantly correlated with both maximum storm surge and significant
wave height. Coastal horizontal morphology was the determining factor
among these correlations. Fast-moving TCs tended to amplify the storm
surge along open coastlines (Pearson correlation coefficient, R = 0.62),
but reduce it in semi-enclosed bays (R = -0.52). A similar tendency has
also been observed for the case of wave height (open coast, R = 0.62;
bay, R = -0.52). The negative correlation contrasts with the general
perception that the coincidence of TC wind speed and forward speed
vectors generates a larger storm surge. The influence of coastal
morphology was most prominent for TCs with a central pressure lower than
956 hPa. Tropical cyclone operational forecasts are continuously
improving; however, there is still scope to improve the precision of
storm surge - wave predictions. These findings may be beneficial in two
main areas. Firstly, considering TC transitional speed and coastal
geometry (open coastline or bays) - meteorologists and oceanographers
could provide more comprehensive surge-wave forecasts, and emergency
management personnel could use pre-landfall forward speed for more
precise early warning. Secondly, coastal areas at risk with no access to
advanced weather forecasting could use these empirical findings along
with other TC intensity related information (e.g., wind speed, central
pressure, radius) for improvement of early-warning activities.