I apologize if this has already been posted, but it is a very informative read for any of you that have not seen this. Please discuss if you'd like.
http://www.worldclimatereport.com/index.php/2006/05/10/major-hurricanes-more-but-not-stronger/
SST/Intensity Relationship...a very good read.
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- terstorm1012
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Interesting read. Thank you.
Now...I may be confusing things (and to be honest I've stayed out of the climate debate), but I could have sworn I read something earlier this year that says rising SSTs will not make more 'canes but make the ones that form stronger.
I know this area of research is new and has some poor data sets to work with, so this may be why I'm confused.
Now...I may be confusing things (and to be honest I've stayed out of the climate debate), but I could have sworn I read something earlier this year that says rising SSTs will not make more 'canes but make the ones that form stronger.
I know this area of research is new and has some poor data sets to work with, so this may be why I'm confused.
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- Stratusxpeye
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terstorm1012 wrote:Interesting read. Thank you.
Now...I may be confusing things (and to be honest I've stayed out of the climate debate), but I could have sworn I read something earlier this year that says rising SSTs will not make more 'canes but make the ones that form stronger.
I know this area of research is new and has some poor data sets to work with, so this may be why I'm confused.
I think what they are saying is that there will be more majors, not more named storms per se. The 83 degree threshold is almost a requirement for a major cane to form; however, temperatures exceeding 83F do not make much of a difference in intensity. At that point, other factors like shear make the difference.
That said, if more hurricanes become major, there probably will be a few more Cat 5s...just a statistical extrapolation. Bottom line is that Katrina, Rita, and Wilma did not become superstorms because of high SSTs...once you reach 83F SST is not much of a factor.
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- terstorm1012
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mempho wrote:terstorm1012 wrote:Interesting read. Thank you.
Now...I may be confusing things (and to be honest I've stayed out of the climate debate), but I could have sworn I read something earlier this year that says rising SSTs will not make more 'canes but make the ones that form stronger.
I know this area of research is new and has some poor data sets to work with, so this may be why I'm confused.
I think what they are saying is that there will be more majors, not more named storms per se. The 83 degree threshold is almost a requirement for a major cane to form; however, temperatures exceeding 83F do not make much of a difference in intensity. At that point, other factors like shear make the difference.
That said, if more hurricanes become major, there probably will be a few more Cat 5s...just a statistical extrapolation. Bottom line is that Katrina, Rita, and Wilma did not become superstorms because of high SSTs...once you reach 83F SST is not much of a factor.
OK Gotcha, NOW it makes sense. So the water could be 98 degrees and not make much of a difference....ok.
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This is bad. They provide very poor statistics for the claim that "temps above 83F make no difference" - they just put up a messy scatterplot and claim it. They need the regression, at least, and a power analysis since it's noisy data over a narrow range of the independent variable. Basically, they make the (common) mistake of assuming a relationship not significant by Fisher's arbitrary cutoff means no relationship *exists*, which is very wrong. Further, using the data to define a cutoff biases their estimate for effects over 83 degrees downward (the cutoff has to be a temp with spuriously high windspeeds in order to be a cutoff) and they need some kind of Monte Carlo to estimate that effect. So they're using an inadequate evaluation of a biased data set.
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- GeneratorPower
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curtadams wrote:This is bad. They provide very poor statistics for the claim that "temps above 83F make no difference" - they just put up a messy scatterplot and claim it. They need the regression, at least, and a power analysis since it's noisy data over a narrow range of the independent variable. Basically, they make the (common) mistake of assuming a relationship not significant by Fisher's arbitrary cutoff means no relationship *exists*, which is very wrong. Further, using the data to define a cutoff biases their estimate for effects over 83 degrees downward (the cutoff has to be a temp with spuriously high windspeeds in order to be a cutoff) and they need some kind of Monte Carlo to estimate that effect. So they're using an inadequate evaluation of a biased data set.
Very good analysis. I was thinking something similar but I like the way you put it.
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- terstorm1012
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curtadams wrote:This is bad. They provide very poor statistics for the claim that "temps above 83F make no difference" - they just put up a messy scatterplot and claim it. They need the regression, at least, and a power analysis since it's noisy data over a narrow range of the independent variable. Basically, they make the (common) mistake of assuming a relationship not significant by Fisher's arbitrary cutoff means no relationship *exists*, which is very wrong. Further, using the data to define a cutoff biases their estimate for effects over 83 degrees downward (the cutoff has to be a temp with spuriously high windspeeds in order to be a cutoff) and they need some kind of Monte Carlo to estimate that effect. So they're using an inadequate evaluation of a biased data set.
oy vey! I shoulda paid more attention in statistics class!
But yes I do see what you mean. The data set may be off.
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- Hybridstorm_November2001
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