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Are Hurricanes Increasing in Frequency and Intensity? Luke Annala-Kinne, Dylan Esmonde, Emma McArdle, Rylee Sweeney
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Al Gore’s documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth,” makes statements such as; “The number of Category 4 and 5 hurricanes has most doubled in the last 30 years.” After looking at the documentary’s website, www.climatecrisis.net, I began to research Gore’s sources. Information regarding hurricanes was mainly from Kerry Emanuel.
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Frequency vs. Time Using chi-squared analysis, I found that the chi-squared sum proved the null hypothesis correct- There is not a correlation between the passing of time (and warmer world temperatures) and hurricane frequency.
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“Increasing destructiveness of tropical cyclones over the past 30 years” By Kerry Emanuel Power Dissipation Index “Although the frequency of tropical cyclones is an important scientific issue, it is not by itself an optimal measure of tropical cyclone threat. The actual monetary loss in wind storms rises roughly as the cube of the wind speed as does the PD.” Nowhere in this paper does Emanuel relate the PDI to the Saffir- Simpson system of categorizing hurricanes.
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What do the experts say? IPCC: –Frequency— “no clear trend” with current debate –Intensity— “more likely than not” that future storms will increase in intensity NOAA: –Frequency— “variability makes detecting any long-term trends in tropical cyclone activity difficult” –Intensity— “Model studies and theory project a 3-5% increase in wind-speed per degree Celsius increase of tropical sea surface temperatures.” NOAA Hurricane Modeling Source: http://www.gfdl.gov/~tk/glob_warm_hurr.html
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Hurricane Frequency + 10 Year Average
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10 Year Average (1851-2006)
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10 Year Average + 6 Order Polynomial
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Category 4 and 5 Hurricanes
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10 Year Averaged Categories + 50 Year Trendlines
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50 Year Trendline Predictions for 2050
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Change in Wind Speed
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Wind Speed Change as a Function of Temperature
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Temperature Vs. Windspeed
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Table Of Most Deadly Hurricanes RankHurricaneSeasonFatalities 1Great Hurricane178022,000 2Mitch199811-18,000 3Galveston19008-12,000 4Fifi19748-10,000 5Dominican Republic19302-8,000 6Flora19637-8,000 7Pointe-a-Pitre17766,000+ 8Newfoundland17754-4,163 9Okeechobee”19284,075+ 10San Ciriaco18993,433+
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Table Of Most Costly Hurricanes NameYear Katrina2005 Andrew1992 Wilma2005 Charley2004 Ivan2004 Hugo1989 Agnes1972 Betsy1965 Rita2005 Frances2004 Name (cont)Year (cont) Camille1969 Diane1955 Jeanne2004 Frederic1979 New England (1938)1938 TS Allison2001 Floyd1999 Great Atlantic (1944)1944 Fran1996
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Conclusions Compounding factors cause fuzzy data and large seasonal variation Extant hurricane data too unclear to make accurate predictions of future activity No pattern to indicate a clear increase in frequency or intensity
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EXCELSIOR
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