Zackiedawg wrote:Derek Ortt wrote:what this tells us is... actually design the levees to withstand a category 3 hurricane, and the region will be many times safer. We had levees that failed in cat 1 conditions
Question: How long would it take for the storm surge 'bulge', along with wind-formed waves, to recede after the hurricane drops its winds to a lower category?
I've wondered if there is any accurate way to estimate this, as a storm like Katrina brings the problems to light. Katrina was at one point a strong Cat 5 storm, and during much of her approach to land was still a strong Cat 4 storm. So over the several days that she churned through the gulf at Cat 5 or 4, and considering the large size of the storm's hurricane windfield, she built up a high cat 4 to cat 5 storm surge.
So if hours before landfall, the hurricane's winds were measured at Cat 3 strength, meaning she downgraded just before hitting land, would it not take much more time for the seas ahead of her to 'calm' to a level more appropriate to a smaller storm?
It seems like Katrina downgraded her windspeed before striking land, but her surge was still at Cat 4 level or more as it pushed up on shore. Combined with the shallow ramp up on the gulf coast and the high tide, the surge seemed to be equal to a Cat 4 or 5 storm.
And though New Orleans experienced no more than Cat 1 winds, wouldn't they too have been fecing the effects of a far stronger surge? A ripple travelling across a pond does not greatly diminish in height as it travels...the degredation of strength, speed and height is much slower in water than in air. So despite Katrina's Cat 3 deintensification, it would seem logical to conclude that much of the Mississippi coast received high cat 4 or cat 5 surge, and New Orleans' lakes and canals were bulged by surge of at least Cat 3.
Any opinion?
I still have serious doubts despite what the NHC has stated Katrina's winds were "only" category 1 in the New Orleans area. What she did to the Superdome's roof and other areas around the region were not done by cat. 1 winds. IMO