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Contact:
Tracey Peake,
News Services, 919/515-3470
May
13, 2005
New
Hurricane Prediction Model Forecasts Active 2005
Season
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Researchers at North Carolina State University have
developed a new model for predicting the number of
hurricanes likely to form in the Atlantic Ocean during
the 2005 season, as well as the number of those hurricanes
likely to threaten the eastern seaboard.
In an article published in a recent issue of Geophysical
Research Letters, Dr. Lian Xie, professor of marine,
earth and atmospheric sciences, along with colleagues
Dr. Leonard Pietrafesa, professor and director of the
Office of External Affairs in the College of Physical
and Mathematical Sciences, and graduate student Tingzhaung
Yan, describe the methodology they used in creating
their prediction model as well as the results of their
analysis. The mathematical model evaluates data from
the last 100 years on Atlantic Ocean hurricane positions
and intensity, as well as other variables including
weather patterns and sea surface temperatures, in order
to predict how many storms will form and where they
will make landfall.
“The most important factor in determining the
probability of landfall was the temperature difference
between the North and South Atlantic Ocean,” says
Xie. “When we looked at the histories of these
storms we discovered that if the water in the North
Atlantic was warmer than in the South Atlantic, landfall
on the eastern seaboard of the United States became
more likely.”
Based on their data, the researchers believe that
2005 will see an active hurricane season, and are predicting
5 to 6 hurricanes to form in the Atlantic. Of those,
2 to 3 are deemed likely to impact the eastern seaboard
of the United States. The Atlantic hurricane season
runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.
The data used in the NC State study was provided by
the Climate Prediction Center (CPC) of the National
Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP), a division
of the National Weather Service (NWS) of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). This
study is co-sponsored by the National Climatic Data
Center and the Coastal Services Center of NOAA, as
a component of the NOAA/NCSU Cooperative Program on
Climate and Weather Impacts on Society and the Environment
(CWISE).
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