Quantifying hurricane wind speed with undersea sound
Quantifying hurricane wind speed with undersea sound
Date
2006-06
Authors
Wilson, Joshua David
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Person
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Citable URI
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Date Created
Location
Florida
DOI
10.1575/1912/1262
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Keywords
Underwater acoustics
Hurricanes
Hurricanes
Abstract
Hurricanes, powerful storms with wind speeds that can exceed 80 m/s, are one of the
most destructive natural disasters known to man. While current satellite technology
has made it possible to effectively detect and track hurricanes, expensive 'hurricanehunting'
aircraft are required to accurately classify their destructive power. Here
we show that passive undersea acoustic techniques may provide a promising tool for
accurately quantifying the destructive power of a hurricane and so may provide a safe
and inexpensive alternative to aircraft-based techniques.
It is well known that the crashing of wind-driven waves generates underwater
noise in the 10 Hz to 10 kHz range. Theoretical and empirical evidence are combined
to show that underwater acoustic sensing techniques may be valuable for measuring
the wind speed and determining the destructive power of a hurricane. This is done
by first developing a model for the acoustic intensity and mutual intensity in an
ocean waveguide due to a hurricane and then determining the relationship between
local wind speed and underwater acoustic intensity. Acoustic measurements of the
underwater noise generated by hurricane Gert are correlated with meteorological data
from reconnaissance aircraft and satellites to show that underwater noise intensity
between 10 and 50 Hz is approximately proportional to the cube of the local wind
speed. From this it is shown that it should be feasible to accurately measure the
local wind speed and quantify the destructive power of a hurricane if its eye wall
passes directly over a single underwater acoustic sensor. The potential advantages
and disadvantages of the proposed acoustic method are weighed against those of
currently employed techniques.
It has also long been known that hurricanes generate microseisms in the 0.1 to
0.6 Hz frequency range through the non-linear interaction of ocean surface waves.
Here we model microseisms generated by the spatially inhomogeneous waves of a
hurricane with the non-linear wave equation where a second-order acoustic field is
created by first-order ocean surface wave motion. We account for the propagation of
microseismic noise through range-dependent waveguide environments from the deep
ocean to a receiver on land. We compare estimates based on the ocean surface wave
field measured in hurricane Bonnie with seismic measurements from Florida.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2006
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Citation
Wilson, J. D. (2006). Quantifying hurricane wind speed with undersea sound [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/1262