Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1576467669> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 98 of
98
with 100 items per page.
- W1576467669 abstract "“Hurricanes” are North Atlantic Ocean (NAO) cyclones that attain a maximum sustained surface-wind speed, vmax, of ≥119 km/h (Bell et al., 2000), which corresponds to SaffirSimpson storm-intensity categories ≥1 (NOAA, 2006). A key climate-change concern involves the question of whether an increasing trend in sea surface temperature (SST)— considered a signal of global warming by being induced or enhanced by increased atmospheric greenhouse-gas concentrations—portends increased tropical cyclone intensities. Historical data, physical theories, and modeling all appear to link increasing SST to increased cyclone activity, intensity, or potential destructiveness in the NAO and other ocean basins (Saunders & Harris, 1997; Emanuel 2000, 2004; Goldenberg et al., 2001; Knutson & Tuleya, 2004; Emanuel, 2005; Trenberth, 2005; Webster et al., 2005; Hoyos et al., 2006; Mann & Emanuel, 2006; Santer et al., 2006; Trenberth & Shea, 2006). Correlations between cyclonic storm intensity, in particular, and increased SST beginning around 1950 to 1970 (Emanuel, 2000, 2004; Goldenberg et al., 2001; Knutson & Tuleya 2004; Emanuel, 2005; Trenberth, 2005; Webster et al., 2005; Hoyos et al., 2006; Mann & Emanuel, 2006; Santer et al., 2006; Trenberth & Shea, 2006) are claimed to support the “SST hypothesis” that local SST directly affects cyclonic intensity, just as predicted by models of storm-related heat-transfer dynamics (Emanuel, 2000, 2004; Knutson & Tuleya, 2004). For example, tropical cyclone frequency, duration, and intensity over the past 35 years showed an increased number and proportion of hurricanes reaching Saffir-Simpson categories 4 or 5 (most notably in the North Pacific, Indian, and Southwest Pacific Oceans; less so in the NAO), but a decreased number of cyclones and cyclone days in all ocean basins except the North Atlantic during the past decade (Webster et al., 2005). This conclusion is consistent with those from studies that focused instead on recent trends toward increased hurricane destructive potential, largely reflecting hurricanes of category 4 or 5 (Emanuel, 2005; Trenberth, 2005). Other studies have questioned a direct, causal link between SST and hurricane intensity, and support an alternative, “extreme-value hypothesis” that recent strong hurricanes like Katrina are simply extreme samples from an essentially stationary intensity distribution that has not increased appreciably over at least the last half century (Landsea et al., 1996; Michaels et al., 2005; Landsea et al., 2006; Bogen et al., 2007). Among factors that are thought to influence hurricane activity—such as multidecadal oscillations in oceanic thermohaline circulation, upper tropospheric high-pressure regions, dips in tropospheric vertical wind" @default.
- W1576467669 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1576467669 creator A5041106701 @default.
- W1576467669 creator A5046579738 @default.
- W1576467669 creator A5083843099 @default.
- W1576467669 date "2010-07-14" @default.
- W1576467669 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W1576467669 title "Hurricane Intensity, Sea Surface Temperature, and Stochastic Variation" @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1500657154 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1542533195 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1543220323 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1894026296 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1966276836 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1970516179 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1975066035 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1978662910 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1998621099 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W1999239763 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2010690624 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2015779554 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2016709145 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2035172605 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2038270246 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2046863405 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2056817186 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2070927678 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2072399729 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2075008102 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2076977109 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2085342383 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2118877316 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2120568583 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2128955349 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2129127818 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2137582471 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2145211716 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2150258239 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2176670204 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2178405310 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2181393575 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2915927529 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W2918050685 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W3121930302 @default.
- W1576467669 cites W593974414 @default.
- W1576467669 hasPublicationYear "2010" @default.
- W1576467669 type Work @default.
- W1576467669 sameAs 1576467669 @default.
- W1576467669 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W1576467669 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1576467669 hasAuthorship W1576467669A5041106701 @default.
- W1576467669 hasAuthorship W1576467669A5046579738 @default.
- W1576467669 hasAuthorship W1576467669A5083843099 @default.
- W1576467669 hasBestOaLocation W15764676691 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C111368507 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C120665830 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C134097258 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C153294291 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C2778334786 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C39432304 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C44870925 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C49204034 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C91586092 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConcept C93038891 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C111368507 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C120665830 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C121332964 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C127313418 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C134097258 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C153294291 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C205649164 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C2778334786 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C39432304 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C44870925 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C49204034 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C91586092 @default.
- W1576467669 hasConceptScore W1576467669C93038891 @default.
- W1576467669 hasLocation W15764676691 @default.
- W1576467669 hasLocation W15764676692 @default.
- W1576467669 hasLocation W15764676693 @default.
- W1576467669 hasOpenAccess W1576467669 @default.
- W1576467669 hasPrimaryLocation W15764676691 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W1965953496 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W2003357297 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W2071869496 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W2099384156 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W2172380210 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W3081257409 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W3083890026 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W3163476451 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W4233484250 @default.
- W1576467669 hasRelatedWork W4280606618 @default.
- W1576467669 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1576467669 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1576467669 magId "1576467669" @default.
- W1576467669 workType "article" @default.