Tropical Storm Irene

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

When is a hurricane not a hurricane? Well, when it doesn’t blow 64 knots (33 m/sec, 74 mph), because then it’s only a tropical storm. Inspired by a post over at the Cliff Mass Weather Blog, I’ve been trying to find a single report of sustained hurricane force winds anywhere along Irene’s path at or near landfall … no joy. I knew exaggeration was the order of the day for some folks in the climate debate, but I hadn’t realized that the illness had infected the Weather Service itself.

Figure 1. The path of Tropical Storm Irene over the mainland of the US. Symbols with a yellow center to the black storm symbol indicate a (claimed) hurricane. SOURCE ibiseye

We were fortunate in that we have very good records of the wind speed when Irene made landfall. It went almost directly over the wind recording station at Cape Lookout, at the bottom of Figure 2.

Figure 2. A closeup of Irene’s landfall. There are four wind recording stations in the area, at Beaufort (below the “70” marker at lower left), at Cape Lookout (bottom left) and at Cape Hatteras (upper right). The Onslow Buoy is located offshore, southwest of Cape Lookout.

The wind record at Cape Lookout is quite interesting, as the eye of the hurricane passed right over the anemometer there. Figure 3 shows the wind dropping as the eye went over, coincident with the deep plunge of the barometric pressure to 950 hPa.

Figure 3. TS Irene wind (light blue) and barometric pressure (violet) at Cape Lookout before, during, and after landfall. Green line at the top shows the minimum wind speed for a storm to be classified as a hurricane (64 knots).

Figure 3 shows the classic pattern of a hurricane passing directly overhead. The “eye” of the hurricane has almost no wind, and is at the center of the low pressure area. You can also see the “calm before the storm. But what you can’t see is any trace of hurricane force winds.

Not finding hurricane force winds at the eye, I looked at the other nearby stations as well. The weather station at Cape Hatteras is in the “dangerous semicircle”, the right hand side of the storm track (Fig. 2) where the speed of the storm is added to the speed of the winds circulating around the eye. Beaufort, on the other hand, is in the safer half of the storm, where the speed of the storm is subtracted from the circulating speed of the winds. The Onslow Buoy is also in the safer semicircle, on the left of the storm track in Figure 2. Figure 4 shows those records.

Figure 4. Winds at TS Irene landfall for Cape Lookout, Beaufort, Onslow Offshore Buoy, and Cape Hatteras.

As you can see, although Irene definitely qualifies as a solid tropical storm (winds greater than 35 knots), it does not reach or even really approach the 64-knot threshold for hurricanes. Other than at the eye itself, the winds did not exceed 50 knots, much less reach 64 knots.

After crossing over the land near Cape Hatteras, Irene headed back out to sea again. I thought perhaps it might have picked up steam when it went out over the ocean again. It made a second landfall in Atlantic City and went along the coast to New York.

Figure 5. Second landfall for Irene.The nearest stations to Irene’s track are Costeau (near Mystic Island above Atlantic City), NY Harbor Buoy (outside the mouth of the harbor, in the dangerous semicircle), Sandy Hook (hook shaped peninsula just above Long Branch and central hurricane symbol) and Kings Point (near New Rochelle above New York City). Note that the storm is claimed to be a hurricane until it gets well into New York State.

It appears from an examination of the station data shown below in Figure 6 that it did not pick up strength over the water. By the time Irene reached land a second time, it barely qualified as a tropical storm, much less a hurricane.

Figure 6. Wind speed from Tropical Storm Irene as it made the second landfall.

So, despite looking at Irene before, during, and after both landfalls, there is no hint of a hurricane anywhere. By the time it got to New York the eye of the storm had dissipated, what was left were huge bands of rain clouds.

Is there a moral in this story? Well, I can understand people taking extra precautions, better safe than sorry is a good rule. And I certainly imagine that when the Weather Service re-examines the records, the error will be corrected.

But that doesn’t help in making the decisions. As soon as Irene hit land, it should have been downgraded immediately to a tropical storm. That’s what it was, not a hurricane making landfall but a tropical storm. As far as I can tell, we still haven’t had a hurricane make landfall during Obama’s presidency, a historical oddity.

Individuals and city mayors and the people in charge of the emergency response can call for any level of reaction to storm threats. They may decide an exaggerated response is appropriate.

But they need accurate information to do that, not exaggerated claims. They need the actual facts, the best estimates with no exaggeration on either the high or low side.

In this case, it appears that people got so wrapped up in the question of the winds, and the fear of the winds, that they overlooked what actually made Irene unusual. This was not the wind speed, but the size of the storm. Combined with Irene’s generally slow movement over the ground, Irene’s huge dimensions meant that any given area would get rained on for a really, really long time.

And in turn that meant that the cities and towns along the coast, the ones receiving all of the attention from the fear of high winds and attendant storm surges, weren’t the towns in danger. Unlike the coastal cities, the vast expanses inland were not able to have the rainwater just flow back into the ocean. Inland, the water piled up and overflowed the banks.

And so, because of the overestimation of the wind speeds, our attention was diverted from the real threat. Because of the claimed hurricane-force winds, a storm surge up to eight feet was predicted in New York Harbor. But in the event, the storm surge was barely three feet, a non-event … and meanwhile, New England was getting badly flooded.

So the moral to me is, honesty is the best policy for a National Weather Service. Don’t exaggerate the possible effects to be on the “safe side”, don’t minimize the possible effects. Just give us the best information you have, and let us make up our own minds. As Sergeant Friday used to say … “Just the facts, ma’am” …

w.

NOTE: All wind data is from the NOAA National Buoy Data Center http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/.

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205 Comments
Keith
September 1, 2011 12:07 pm

Chris D: might that have churned the layers a bit, rendering any further reconstructions or verification somewhat tricky?
Good thing that no other paleo reconstructions have ever suffered from any issues or events that may have resulted in loss of resolution or blending of figures across time…

Roger Knights
September 1, 2011 12:09 pm

My opinion is that if the NHC had downgraded Irene just before landfall to Cat. 1 (as it should have) and then downgraded it to a TS after landfall (instead of absurdly claiming then that sustained hurricane-force winds extended for hundreds of miles from the center), it would have embarrassed Mayor Bloomberg and other politicians who’d been whooping it up (like Obama). And they’d have been mad at it–in a period when the NWS is fighting against a 20% cut in its funding and it needs all the friends it can get. So it quailed and failed.

Robert Smith
September 1, 2011 12:27 pm

I’m depressed. Here in Orkney, North Scotland, we had sustained wind of 50kts with gusts over 70 last sunday and nobody cared. 🙁

Bill Parsons
September 1, 2011 12:28 pm

Tony Raccuglia says:
September 1, 2011 at 11:19 am
Irene was not a hurricane on landfall-the facts undeniably speak for themselves-in terms of damage done, we have to remember that the East coast has not seen a tropical system of this strength in quite some time-its been since Gloria that Long Island has seen winds even near 60mph-thats a span of over 25 years-so there were likely many trees that had not even seen those kinds of winds-that combined with the wet ground would account for the seemingly worse damage.

I was in Amherst, Mass, Saturday through Wednesday, arriving there just as the storm did, and leaving after it peaked. The town has an elevation of about 300 feet, and is a couple hours’ drive inland from Boston.
Power failed Saturday night for an hour or so. On Sunday the skies were overcast with the storm clouds, which moved across the horizon from right to left at a good clip. Over time it was possible to imagine their circular direction, though we must have been on the outer edge of the vortex. The temps were hot and humidity rose into the 80 to 90 % range. The rain fell intermittently throughout the day.
I’m not a regular in the area, but I thought this was a fairly serious storm, whatever name you give to it. As Mr. Raccuglia points out above, hurricanes usually spend their energy as they drive northwards, and as soon as they hit land. This one hit the Carolinas and kept on going, delivering enough wind and rain to the New England area to cause severe flooding more than a hundred miles inland along the Connecticut River, and as far north as Vermont. By now everyone has seen the video of cars being swept away in the river flooding with their drivers still inside. As we drove around on Sunday, I was pretty impressed with the downed limbs and whole trees, the flooding of several feet above flood stage, and (yes, even the MSM coverage of) the flooding and winds along the coasts.
The point, I suppose, is that, “classifying” anything for political purposes is risky. I’m sure that emergency managers in various administrations have more to gain by hyping the state of emergency in order to prevent people from getting into trouble, and to bring in more emergency funds. From the perspective of some, it’s possible to consider this was “just another storm”. For others – especially people near the coast or living in river valleyes – it may have turned horrific. In either case, one can only be grateful for good, honest up-to-date reporting without any slant.

September 1, 2011 12:32 pm

John Cooper says:
September 1, 2011 at 10:52 am
“Note that it doesn’t specify surface winds. Secondly, the only way to find the maximum wind is to traverse the hurricane at altitude with an aircraft, which is what NOAA does to find the maximum, which may not fall over a surface weather station or weather buoy.”
Do you mean to suggest that NOAA is so confused about their basic mission that they are not telling the viewing audience the speed of the surface winds? Your defense of them makes them look downright moronic.

Gary
September 1, 2011 12:36 pm

After four and a half days and still without power here in RI, I have to say you’re nit-picking, Willis. The damage was worse than Hurricane Bob in 1991 which passed right over rather than 100 miles to the west. Irene was a hurricane at one point and parsing wind speeds between category 1 and tropical storm hardly matters except for statistical analysis ex post facto. The surge was not a non-event along the southern New England coast. Coming with high tides it eroded beaches and damaged property even if only half as large as forecast. Although I think there was media over-hype at times, please don’t not get carried away with contrarianism.

Larry Miller
September 1, 2011 12:38 pm

Others have made several cogent observations re: tree damage on the east coast – as a professional forester allow me to add my 2 cents worth.
* the ground was saturated in many areas due to heavy rains within the preceding 10 days. Soggy wet ground makes trees inherently less windfirm.
* trees with leaves make excellent sails, catching much more air than leafless trees
*much of the area covered has been heavily developed over the years – streets, roads, houses, and shopping centers can wreak considerable havoc on the root systems of trees
*the species of trees in the east, once you move out of the southern pine region, are heavy to hardwoods (oaks, hickories, maples, e.g.). Unlike southern pines, such species grow in a region that hurricanes and tropical storms rarely visit. Thus, these species are less adapted to such storm conditions when they do occur.
*many of the communities hit very hard are older, with older trees. Trees do not live forever, and older trees become creaky and decadent just as do we – such trees will be much more easily damaged than younger trees

Editor
September 1, 2011 12:38 pm

Willis, your analysis is fine, but premature. Wait until all of the data is in before throwing the NWS/NHC under the bus.
http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Storm_pages/irene2011/wind.html
Look at the H*WIND site and see the maximum 1-min wind swaths for NC and NY. Then cross-reference the individual maps to get the correct snapshots. Only 12-hours before landfall in NYC, 62-knot winds were analyzed off of the DelMarVa peninsula — which could easily to 64-knots due to sampling issues.

So if you wish to give the NHC/NWS the benefit of the doubt, then you are quibbling over 2-knots of wind between the definition of TS and HURR, which is well within the 5-knot reporting thresholds in the best-track dataset.

Tom in Florida
September 1, 2011 12:39 pm

Willis Eschenbach says:
September 1, 2011 at 12:25 pm
“The graphs show the maximum of 8-minute wind speed averages for each hour.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_sustained_wind#Definition
“The United States National Weather Service defines sustained winds within tropical cyclones by averaging winds over a period of one minute, measured at the same 10 metres (33 ft) height. This is an important distinction, as the value of a one-minute sustained wind is 14% greater than a ten-minute sustained wind.”

MikeU
September 1, 2011 12:39 pm

I suspect John Cooper is correct… according to what I’ve read they’re supposed to measure winds at a height of 10 meters for 10 minutes to get an average wind speed when classifying hurricanes, but that’s rather impractical. Surface stations aren’t suspended 10m up in the air, and aircraft cannot measure that low to the ground (nor for 10 minutes). They must use some sort of algorithm to translate from aircraft and/or ground readings to get *estimated* wind speeds at 10 meters.
As long as the methods they’ve used to measure hurricane strength have been consistent over recent history (the past few decades)… we have a common point of reference, and this can properly be considered a class 1 hurricane when it made landfall. If those methods have changed, bumping the classifications up artificially – that might warrant closer scrutiny.

JR
September 1, 2011 12:45 pm

The graphs show the maximum of 8-minute wind speed averages for each hour.
In the U.S., 1-minute sustained winds are used to classify tropical cyclones.

Houston Russ
September 1, 2011 12:45 pm

Joe Bastardi says:
September 1, 2011 at 11:02 am
Living in the southwest corner of Houston, I can assure you that Ike was a tropical storm when it got to us. Leaves were blown out of trees, some branches were broken, some property damage and the electric lines were down for two weeks. Ho hum. Bolivar peninsula, at ground level, didn’t have hurricane force winds either. It was under 20 foot of water.

Editor
September 1, 2011 12:49 pm

The 5AM discussion by the NHC on Irene for 08/28 was good, showing landfall as a 60-knot tropical storm. But since a hurricane is 64 knots, of course H warnings were held.
IRENE IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN NEAR HURRICANE STRENGTH UNTIL IT MOVES INTO SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND LATER TODAY…
AND IT WILL ONLY TAKE MODEST CONVECTION TO BRING DOWN STRONGER WINDS ALOFT TO THE SURFACE AS SUSTAINED HURRICANE-FORCE WINDS OR GUSTS.
SLOW WEAKENING IS EXPECTED AFTER LANDFALL AS IRENE BECOMES A POST-TROPICAL CYCLONE IN ABOUT 24 HOURS.
INIT 28/0900Z 39.2N 74.5W 65 KT 75 MPH
12H 28/1800Z 41.8N 73.2W 60 KT 70 MPH…INLAND
24H 29/0600Z 46.0N 70.4W 55 KT 65 MPH…POST-TROP/EXTRATROP

SixnaHalfFeet
September 1, 2011 12:56 pm

Splitting hairs.
Sure you may want to say Irene was not a hurricane, but the definition of a hurricane is a little arbitrary. Irene was definitely a tropical cyclone, it looked like one, it acted like one. Tropical cyclones vary in intensity from what we call tropical storms to what we call category 4 hurricanes, but they are all still tropical cyclones that look and act similar. Irene was still what it was, just a little weaker than was expected.

JohnInSoCal
September 1, 2011 1:11 pm

It doesn’t require 75mph winds to knock a tree down if the ground is soaked. Irene was just the latest rough weather the NE has undergone this year. Before Irene, their rivers were at Springtime runoff rates – not late summer. Trees that can withstand 90mph can fail at 35mph when they are rooted in mud.

Tom in Florida
September 1, 2011 1:23 pm

Wind speed is the measuring stick to estimate potential damage of a land falling hurricane.
http://pcbdaily.com/hurricane-category-rating-system says this:
“The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale is a 1-5 rating based on the hurricane’s present intensity. This is used to give an estimate of the potential property damage and flooding expected along the coast from a hurricane landfall.
Category One Hurricane:
Winds 74-95 mph (64-82 kt or 119-153 km/hr). Storm surge generally 4-5 ft above normal. No real damage to building structures. Damage primarily to unanchored mobile homes, shrubbery, and trees. Some damage to poorly constructed signs. Also, some coastal road flooding and minor pier damage.”
In the case of Irene, potential damage was estimated to be that of a Cat 1 hurricane and it certainly was without regard to the recorded wind.
End of story.

Jeremy
September 1, 2011 1:27 pm

Interesting analysis. The NOAA data seems to indicate significantly higher wind speeds though:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/2011/al09/al092011.public_b.027.shtml
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/2011/al09/al092011.update.08280937.shtml
Do you disagree with their methods of obtaining this data?
Either way, it’s all semantics. They had it pegged as a Category 1 storm by the time it got to the coast. Anyone expecting Category 5 winds from this storm was insane, but that’s hardly the fault of the NWS.