Title of article :
A probabilistic description of the wind over Liverpool Bay with application to oil spill simulations
Author/Authors :
A.J. Elliott، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Surface winds from the UK Meteorological Office mesoscale (12 km grid) atmospheric model have been used to define the wind
at a location in Liverpool Bay during 1997–2001. Winds from the SW (centred on 240 ) with a speed of about 10 m/s (20 knots) were
the most frequent, although weaker winds from the SE were also common. The wind spectra were red in character and showed no
evidence for a peak at the synoptic (2–5 day) time scale; however, a zero-up-crossing analysis suggested a dominant periodicity at 3.1
days, and at this time scale the winds were spatially coherent over a distance of 300 km. A wind direction transition matrix was
derived to quantify the probability with which the wind changed between two specified directions. This information was then used
with an estimate of the mean duration of a wind event to compute a stochastic wind time series that contained a similar energy level,
periodicity, and direction variability to the archived wind data. The archived and stochastic winds were then used in 1000 oil spill
contingency simulations during which estimates of the mean and minimum times taken for oil to reach the coastline, and the
percentage of the oil impacting selected sites were computed. The stochastic winds provided more realistic results, when compared
against those derived using the wind archive, than those obtained using a wind rose representation of the winds. The derivation and
use of a stochastic wind time series has application to a range of modelling studies.
Keywords :
transition , Irish Sea , Oil spill , synoptic winds , Probability , Contingency , Liverpool Bay
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science