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Extreme wind speed prediction in mountainous area with mixed wind climates.

Authors :
Ma, Teng
Cui, Wei
Zhao, Lin
Yejun, Ding
Genshen, Fang
Ge, Yaojun
Source :
Stochastic Environmental Research & Risk Assessment; Mar2023, Vol. 37 Issue 3, p1163-1181, 19p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

In addition to common synoptic wind system, the mountainous terrain forms a local thermally driven wind system, which makes the mountain wind system have strong terrain dependence. Therefore, in order to estimate the reliable design wind speeds for structural safety, the samples for extreme wind speeds for certain return periods at mountainous areas can only come from field measurements at construction site. However, wind speeds measuring duration is usually short in real practice. This work proposes a novel method for calculating extreme wind speeds in mountainous areas by using short-term field measurement data and long-term nearby meteorological observatory data. Extreme wind speeds in mountainous area are affected by mixed climates composed by local-scale wind and large-scale synoptic wind. The local winds can be recorded at construction site with short observatory time, while the extreme wind speeds samples from synoptic wind climate from nearby meteorological station with long observatory time is extracted for data augmentation. The bridge construction site at Hengduan Mountains in southwestern China is taken as an example in this study. A 10-month dataset of field measurement wind speeds is recorded at this location. This study firstly provides a new method to extract wind speed time series of windstorms. Based on the different windstorm features, the local and synoptic winds are separated. Next, the synoptic wind speeds from nearby meteorological stations are converted and combined with local winds to derive the extreme wind speeds probability distribution function. The calculation results shows that the extreme wind speed in the short return period is controlled by the local wind system, and the long-period extreme wind speed is determined by the synoptic wind system in the mountain area. The descending slope of the synoptic wind speed exceeding probability exceeds the local wind by about 20%. If the influence of mixed climate is not considered, and the wind speed samples are not divided by category, the decline slope will be 7% lower. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14363240
Volume :
37
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Stochastic Environmental Research & Risk Assessment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162234233
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00477-022-02335-7