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highplainsdem

(49,005 posts)
Thu Oct 25, 2012, 01:06 PM Oct 2012

Masters: If Sandy's landfall in NE $100M damage, record rainfall; mid-Atlantic landfall $1B disaster

http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=2273

The Northeast U.S. scenario

If Sandy makes landfall farther to the north near Maine and Nova Scotia, heavy rains will be the main threat, since the cold waters will weaken the storm significantly before landfall. The trees have fewer leaves farther to the north, which will reduce the amount of tree damage and power failures compared to a more southerly track. However, given that ocean temperatures along the Northeast U.S. coast are about 5°F above average, there will be an unusually large amount of water vapor available to make heavy rain. If the trough of low pressure approaching the East Coast taps into the large reservoir of cold air over Canada and pulls down a significant amount of Arctic air, the potential exists for the unusually moist air from Sandy to collide with this cold air from Canada and unleash the heaviest October rains ever recorded in the Northeast U.S., Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. This Northeast U.S. scenario would probably cause damages near $100 million dollars.


The mid-Atlantic U.S. scenario

Landfall Monday along the mid-Atlantic coast on Monday, as predicted by the ECMWF and NOGAPS models, would likely be a billion-dollar disaster. In this scenario, Sandy would be able to bring sustained winds near hurricane force over a wide stretch of heavily populated coast, causing massive power outages, as trees still in leaf fall and take out power lines. Sandy is expected to have tropical storm-force winds that extend out more than 300 miles from the center, which will drive a much larger storm surge than its winds would ordinarily suggest. The full moon is on Monday, which means astronomical tides will be at their peak for the month, increasing potential storm surge flooding. Fresh water flooding from heavy rains would also be a huge concern. Given the ECMWF's consistent handling of Sandy, I believe this mid-Atlantic scenario has a higher probability of occurring than the Northeast U.S. scenario. However, it is likely that the models are overdoing the strength of Sandy at landfall. The models have trouble handling the transition from tropical storm to extratropical storm in these type of situations, and I expect that the 940 mb central pressure of Sandy predicted at landfall Monday in Delaware by the ECMWF model is substantially overdone.
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Masters: If Sandy's landfall in NE $100M damage, record rainfall; mid-Atlantic landfall $1B disaster (Original Post) highplainsdem Oct 2012 OP
Thanks for posting. woodsprite Oct 2012 #1

woodsprite

(11,916 posts)
1. Thanks for posting.
Thu Oct 25, 2012, 02:58 PM
Oct 2012

We're in DE and have heard little on a possible impact other than "it's gonna be real bad" to "don't expect much from it" -- so essentially nothing. Guess we'll have to take the Halloween stuff inside and hope we can get it all set back out again by Wed. night (about 30 tombstones and a dozen or so maze panels). Of course, this was the year we were going to be all set up and have the finishing touches on BEFORE the first trick-or-treaters arrived.

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