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Summer thunderstorms become much more fierce when they collide with a
city than they would otherwise be in the open countryside, according to
research led by Princeton engineers.
Alexandros A. Ntelekos and James A. Smith of Princeton University’s
School of Engineering and Applied Science based their conclusion on
computer models and detailed observations of an extreme thunderstorm that
hit Baltimore in July of 2004.
Their modeling suggests that the city of Baltimore experienced about 30
percent more rainfall than the region it occupies would have experienced
had there been no buildings where the city now sits.
While thunderstorms are thought of as being purely forces of nature,
the Princeton research suggests that man’s built environment can radically
alter a storm’s life cycle.
A storm of the intensity of the 2004 event in Baltimore is extremely
rare, occurring only once every 200 years or so. However, climate change
is expected to make such events more frequent, according to the fourth
assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
“Precipitation events like gully-washing rainstorms are expected to
increase in intensity as the world warms due to the buildup of greenhouse
gases,” said Michael Oppenheimer, a lead author on the IPCC report and the
Albert G. Milbank Professor of Geosciences and International Affairs at
Princeton. “This is just the sort of research that combines science,
engineering, and social response that may allow us to better cope with the
future, warmer climate. I hope it will also serve as a warning about the
complexity of adaptation, and therefore, as a goad to policymakers to act
more urgently to stabilize the climate.”
In yesterday’s intense storm in New York City -- which played havoc
with subways, street traffic, and airports – about three inches of rain
fell in one hour. In the 2004 storm that the researchers studied, about
six inches fell within two hours.
“The storm that occurred yesterday in New York City is an example of
the sort of event that we expect more of in the future,” said Oppenheimer.
“The disruptive effect was quite obvious.”
Observational data shows that, during the 2004 storm, parts of
Baltimore experienced as many lightning strikes in the space of two hours
as they normally receive during the course of a year.
Much of the lightning during the 2004 storm wrapped around the western
edges of Baltimore and Washington, D.C., to the south. “It’s as if all of
a sudden the lightning can ‘feel’ the city,” said Ntelekos, a Princeton
graduate student in civil and environmental engineering who is a fellow
with the Woodrow Wilson School’s Science, Technology, and Environmental
Policy (STEP) program.
The interaction between storm and city has serious consequences for
urbanites as well as policymakers.
“This means that warm-season thunderstorm systems will probably
increasingly lead to more flash flooding, which can be very dangerous,”
said Smith, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at
Princeton.
Hydrologists have observed evidence in the past that urban environments
alter the behavior of storms. But they have mostly noted average increases
in rainfall over long periods of time. Until now, they have not made
observations of specific extreme storms because they lacked the right
tools to do so.
The National Science Foundation-funded research by Ntelekos and Smith
pieced together many different pieces of observational information on
lightning strikes, rainfall, clouds and aerosols -- which they combined
with analyses based on computer models of the atmosphere.
The combined data yielded surprising conclusions. For example,
neighboring cities also can affect the behavior of a storm. The Ntelekos-Smith
research showed that the 2004 storm over Baltimore was partially affected
by the neighboring urban environment of Washington D.C. as air from the
south became more turbulent when passing over it. This made the air mass
particularly ripe for a storm by the time it reached Baltimore.
The scientific consensus so far has been that, during a storm, greater
rainfall occurs on the downwind part of the city than on the upwind side.
However, the researchers found that during the 2004 Baltimore storm,
the western part of the city -- not the upwind, northern part -- was hit
harder by rainfall and thus extreme flooding, according to Ntelekos.
“Previous studies basically came from cities where the terrain was
simple, where you had a town in the middle of nothing -- no mountains, no
water,” he said. “But most of the hub cities are close to either mountains
or water as well as being close to other cities. So we have to understand
how extreme thunderstorms behave over complex terrains.”
Ntelekos and Smith are presenting some of their research this week at a
workshop sponsored by MIRTHE, a National Science Foundation Engineering
Research Center at Princeton University.
Exactly how does the urban environment alter the evolution of
thunderstorms" The researchers described three mechanisms:
Urban heat islands: Cities produce heat and are often 2 to 5 degrees
Fahrenheit hotter than the surrounding environment. In milder storms, this
“heat island” can provide fuel for a modest thunderstorm. But in their
study of the 2004 thunderstorm, the Ntelekos and Smith found that the heat
island had little effect because high winds leveled temperatures.
Urban canopies: While forests have tree canopies, cities have building
canopies. The height and placement of buildings alters a storm’s low-level
wind field, a key ingredient in its behavior. The tall buildings increase
wind drag on the city, resulting in vertical velocities – essentially a
boiling action – that can enhance rainfall. The urban canopy had a large
effect during the 2004 storm, the researchers found, which was exacerbated
all the more by the presence of the Chesapeake Bay to the east.
Urban aerosols. These are essentially minuscule particles in the
atmosphere that are at elevated levels in urban environments due to
industrial and automobile emissions. Traditionally, researchers have
thought that air pollution tends to suppress precipitation. But Ntelekos
and Smith believe their research points to the possibility that urban
aerosols actually increase rainfall.
Ntelekos plans to build on his Baltimore research in a more detailed
study of the effect of aerosols on thunderstorms in New York City. That
research will be a testbed for laser-based sensor technologies being
developed by Princeton’s MIRTHE center, which is charged with developing
next-generation sensor technology for the environmental monitoring,
medical diagnostics and national security.
More Details
Ntelekos and Smith have written a paper that describes the findings of
the 2004 storm over Baltimore and which is currently under review by the
Water Resources Research journal published by the American Geophysical
Union. Their coauthors on this paper are Krajewski and Radoslaw Goska of
the University of Iowa; Mary Lynn Baeck of Princeton; and Andrew J. Miller
of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Ntelekos and Smith are
also coauthors with Witold F. Krajewski, Chair of Water Resources
Engineering at the University of Iowa, of a recent paper in the Journal of
Hydrometeorology which describes links between summer thunderstorms and
flash flooding in the Baltimore metropolitan region.
PAPER ABSTRACT
The climatology of thunderstorms and flash floods in the Baltimore,
Maryland, metropolitan region is examined through analyses of
cloud-to-ground (CG) lightning observations from the National Lightning
Detection Network (NLDN) and discharge observations from 11 U.S.
Geological Survey (USGS) stream gauging stations. A point process
framework is used for analyses of CG lightning strikes and the occurrences
of flash floods. Analyses of lightning strikes as a space–time point
process focus on the mean intensity function, from which the seasonal,
diurnal, and spatial variation in mean lightning frequency are examined.
Important elements of the spatial variation of mean lightning frequency
are 1) initiation of thunderstorms along the Blue Ridge, 2) large
variability of lightning frequency around the urban cores of Baltimore and
Washington D.C., and 3) decreased lightning frequency over the Chesapeake
Bay and Atlantic Ocean. Lightning frequency has a sharp seasonal maximum
around mid-July, and the diurnal cycle of lightning frequency peaks
between 2100 and 2200 UTC with a frequency that is more than an order of
magnitude larger than the minimum frequency at 1200 UTC. The seasonal and
diurnal variation of flash flood occurrence in urban streams of Baltimore
mimics the seasonal and diurnal variation of lightning. The peak of the
diurnal frequency of flash floods in Moores Run, a 9.1-km2 urban watershed
in Baltimore City, occurs at 2200 UTC. Analyses of the lightning and flood
peak data also show a close link between the occurrence of major
thunderstorms systems and flash flooding on a regional scale.
FULL CITATION
Ntelekos, A.A., J.A. Smith and W.F. Krajewski, Climatological Analyses
of Thunderstorms and Flash Floods in the Baltimore Metropolitan Region,
Journal of Hydrometeorology, 8(1), 88-101, 2007.
The entire Journal of Hydrometerology article can be found here:
http://ams.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1175%2FJHM558.1
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