| Literature DB >> 25229242 |
James B Elsner1, Thomas H Jagger1, Ian J Elsner2.
Abstract
The Newcastle/Moore and El Reno tornadoes of May 2013 are recent reminders of the destructive power of tornadoes. A direct estimate of a tornado's power is difficult and dangerous to get. An indirect estimate on a categorical scale is available from a post-storm survery of the damage. Wind speed bounds are attached to the scale, but the scale is not adequate for analyzing trends in tornado intensity separate from trends in tornado frequency. Here tornado intensity on a continuum is estimated from damage path length and width, which are measured on continuous scales and correlated to the EF rating. The wind speeds on the EF scale are treated as interval censored data and regressed onto the path dimensions and fatalities. The regression model indicates a 25% increase in expected intensity over a threshold intensity of 29 m s(-1) for a 100 km increase in path length and a 17% increase in expected intensity for a one km increase in path width. The model shows a 43% increase in the expected intensity when fatalities are observed controlling for path dimensions. The estimated wind speeds correlate at a level of .77 (.34, .93) [95% confidence interval] with a small sample of wind speeds estimated independently from a doppler radar calibration. The estimated wind speeds allow analyses to be done on the tornado database that are not possible with the categorical scale. The modeled intensities can be used in climatology and in environmental and engineering applications. Research is needed to understand the upward trends in path length and width.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25229242 PMCID: PMC4168131 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Damage path statistics.
| Category | Wind Speed |
| Length (km) | Width (m) | ||
| (m s−1) | Mean | Median | Mean | Median | ||
| EF0 | [29–38] | 4994 | 2.27 |
| 54.9 |
|
| EF1 | [38–49] | 2642 | 7.10 |
| 163.8 |
|
| EF2 | [49–62] | 818 | 14.29 |
| 344.1 |
|
| EF3 | [62–75] | 232 | 29.09 |
| 736.3 |
|
| EF4 | [75–89] | 57 | 52.55 |
| 997.9 |
|
| EF5 | [89–105] | 9 | 71.95 |
| 1635.8 |
|
The derived EF scale and corresponding wind speed ranges based on three second gusts. Data are based on all reported tornadoes in the United States (2007–2013). is the sample size. The lower and upper quartile values are given in parentheses.
Figure 1Box plots of damage path length (a) and path width (b) by EF category.
Table of model coefficients.
| log( | ||||
| Covariate | Estimate | Standard Error (S.E.) |
|
|
| (Intercept) | 2.052 | 7.413 | 276.809 | 0 |
| Length | 2.265 | 9.347 | 24.238 |
|
| Width | 1.544 | 4.419 | 34.944 |
|
| FAT? (yes) | .3586 | .0551 | 6.508 |
|
| log( | ||||
| (Intercept) | .6324 | 9.297 | 66.022 | 0 |
| Length |
| 4.033 |
|
|
| Width |
| 8.474 |
|
|
The model has a location [log()] and a scale [log()] component.
Figure 2Histograms of predicted tornado intensities for 36 tornadoes since 2007.
Six randomly chosen from each of six EF ratings (top row lowest to highest). Date/time are given in the panel heading.
Figure 3Model diagnostic plots.
(a) Histogram of predicted tornado intensities. (b) Histogram of model residuals. (c) Quantile-normal plot of the model residuals.
Figure 4Histograms of predicted tornado intensities for nine tornadoes from 2013 for which a wind speed was estimated.
The location of the estimated wind speed is shown as a dot and the range of wind speeds defined by the corresponding EF category is shown as a gray horizontal bar.
Figure 5Box plots of predicted tornado intensity by year.