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UAH student publishes study improving hurricane wind estimates after landfall

A University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) graduate student, Zeb Leffler, has published a study in Geophysical Research Letters that improves accuracy of hurricane wind estimates after landfall.

Tackling Near-Surface Wind Challenges

Leffler’s research focuses on a long-standing problem in meteorology: determining the strength of surface winds when hurricanes move inland. During landfall, a shallow wind layer forms over land, detached from the layer above. Previous methods underestimated surface winds because they didn’t account for this shallow layer separately. Leffler’s approach uses radar data to capture fine vertical wind structure, providing more accurate surface wind measurements.

Impact on Forecasting and Safety

Accurate wind data near the ground is critical for emergency management, risk communication, and post-storm recovery. Leffler’s findings help forecasters make faster, better decisions and support improvements in future hurricane forecast models. Dr. Xiaomin Chen, Leffler’s advisor and principal investigator at UAH’s Earth System Science Center, notes that the study contributes to saving lives and protecting property while advancing the understanding of hazardous wind profiles.

Future Research Directions

Leffler plans to expand his work to more extreme hurricane events, including inland-impact storms like Hurricane Laura (2020). He also aims to integrate radar platforms with lower antennas to capture even finer details of near-surface winds, continuing UAH’s mission to push the frontiers of hurricane science.

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