TY - GEN
T1 - Communities and Areas at Intensive Risk in the Mid-Atlantic Region
T2 - OCEANS 2018 MTS/IEEE Charleston, OCEANS 2018
AU - Loftis, J. Derek
AU - Forrest, David
AU - Wang, Harry
AU - Rogers, Laura
AU - Molthan, Andrew
AU - Bekaert, David
AU - Cohen, Sagy
AU - Sun, Donglian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 IEEE.
PY - 2019/1/7
Y1 - 2019/1/7
N2 - Powerful tropical cyclones along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard produce several unique coastal hazards that result from the combination of heavy inland rainfall and storm surge that accompany events ranging from strong Nor'easters to tropical storms and major hurricanes. Combined with longer-term challenges of rising sea levels attributed to coastal subsidence and steric expansion, impacts from these events are expected to increase, especially in the lower Chesapeake Bay in Portsmouth and Norfolk, VA. In 2017, NASA's Earth Science Disasters Program hosted a regional workshop to explore these issues with particular focus on coastal Virginia and North Carolina, given impacts that NASA's Langley Research Center and the community of Hampton Roads had experienced from several past events. The workshop brought together partners from academia including: Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Old Dominion University, Hampton University, George Mason University, and the University of Alabama. These universities partnered with emergency management and scientists from NASA among other partnering federal agencies to explore capabilities among the team that could improve understanding of the physical processes related to these hazards, their potential impact to these changing communities, and identify methodologies for supporting emergency response and risk mitigation. A pilot demonstration research initiative was developed to examine coastal hazards in two communities adjacent to the James River and Elizabeth River: Portsmouth, VA, and Norfolk, VA. The demonstration study examined inundation via these approaches: 1) reanalysis of impacts from 2011 Hurricane Irene, using numerical weather modeling in combination with coastal surge and hydrodynamic, urban inundation modeling to evaluate combined impact scenarios considering sea level rise, 2) remote sensing of flood extent from available optical and synthetic aperture radar useful for identifying storm impacts and as precursors for future response efforts, 3) adding value to remotely sensed flood maps through depth predictions and related efforts, and 4) examining coastal subsidence as measured through time-series analysis of synthetic aperture radar observations. This presentation will highlight outcomes of the demonstration's activities and describe a series of combined storm surge and sea level rise scenarios relative to the lower Chesapeake Bay during 2011 Hurricane Irene and the anticipated impacts of a similar strength storm in 2045.
AB - Powerful tropical cyclones along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard produce several unique coastal hazards that result from the combination of heavy inland rainfall and storm surge that accompany events ranging from strong Nor'easters to tropical storms and major hurricanes. Combined with longer-term challenges of rising sea levels attributed to coastal subsidence and steric expansion, impacts from these events are expected to increase, especially in the lower Chesapeake Bay in Portsmouth and Norfolk, VA. In 2017, NASA's Earth Science Disasters Program hosted a regional workshop to explore these issues with particular focus on coastal Virginia and North Carolina, given impacts that NASA's Langley Research Center and the community of Hampton Roads had experienced from several past events. The workshop brought together partners from academia including: Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Old Dominion University, Hampton University, George Mason University, and the University of Alabama. These universities partnered with emergency management and scientists from NASA among other partnering federal agencies to explore capabilities among the team that could improve understanding of the physical processes related to these hazards, their potential impact to these changing communities, and identify methodologies for supporting emergency response and risk mitigation. A pilot demonstration research initiative was developed to examine coastal hazards in two communities adjacent to the James River and Elizabeth River: Portsmouth, VA, and Norfolk, VA. The demonstration study examined inundation via these approaches: 1) reanalysis of impacts from 2011 Hurricane Irene, using numerical weather modeling in combination with coastal surge and hydrodynamic, urban inundation modeling to evaluate combined impact scenarios considering sea level rise, 2) remote sensing of flood extent from available optical and synthetic aperture radar useful for identifying storm impacts and as precursors for future response efforts, 3) adding value to remotely sensed flood maps through depth predictions and related efforts, and 4) examining coastal subsidence as measured through time-series analysis of synthetic aperture radar observations. This presentation will highlight outcomes of the demonstration's activities and describe a series of combined storm surge and sea level rise scenarios relative to the lower Chesapeake Bay during 2011 Hurricane Irene and the anticipated impacts of a similar strength storm in 2045.
KW - Compounding Risk
KW - Flood
KW - Forecasting
KW - Model
KW - Simulation
KW - SLR
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85061834964&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/OCEANS.2018.8604864
DO - 10.1109/OCEANS.2018.8604864
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85061834964
T3 - OCEANS 2018 MTS/IEEE Charleston, OCEAN 2018
BT - OCEANS 2018 MTS/IEEE Charleston, OCEAN 2018
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Y2 - 22 October 2018 through 25 October 2018
ER -