ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Application of State of Art Modeling Techniques to Predict Flooding and Waves for an Exposed Coastal Area

Malcolm L. Spaulding    
Annette Grilli    
Chris Damon    
Grover Fugate    
Bryan A. Oakley    
Tatsu Isaji and Lauren Schambach    

Resumen

Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) are developed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to provide guidance in establishing the risk to structures and infrastructure in the coastal zone from storm surge and coincidental waves. The maps are used by state agencies and municipalities to help guide coastal planning and establish the minimum elevation standard for new or substantially improved structures. A summary of the methods used and results of 2012 FIRM mapping are presented for Charlestown, RI; a coastal community located along the exposed, southern shoreline of the state. Concerns with the methods used in the 2012 analysis are put in context with the National Research Council?s (NRC) 2009 review of the FEMA coastal mapping program. New mapping is then performed using state of the art, fully coupled surge and wave modeling and data analysis methods to address the concerns in the NRC review. The new maps and methodologies are in compliance with FEMA regulations and guidelines. The approach makes extensive use of the numerical modeling results from the recent US Army Corp of Engineers (USACE), North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NACCS 2015). Revised flood maps are presented and compared with the 2012 FIRM map to provide insight into the differences. The new maps highlight the importance of developing better estimates of offshore surge dynamics and its coupling to waves, dune erosion based on local observations, and the advancement in nearshore mapping of waves in flood inundated areas by the use of state of the art, two-dimensional wave transformation models.

 Artículos similares

       
 
María Zamarreño Suárez, Juan Marín Martínez, Francisco Pérez Moreno, Raquel Delgado-Aguilera Jurado, Patricia María López de Frutos and Rosa María Arnaldo Valdés    
The use of electroencephalography (EEG) techniques has many advantages in the study of human performance in air traffic control (ATC). At present, these are non-intrusive techniques that allow large volumes of data to be recorded on a continuous basis us... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Giampaolo D?Alessandro, Pantea Tavakolian and Stefano Sfarra    
The present review aims to analyze the application of infrared thermal imaging, aided by bio-heat models, as a tool for the diagnosis of skin and breast cancers. The state of the art of the related technical procedures, bio-heat transfer modeling, and th... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Suhee Jo, Ryeonggu Kwon and Gihwon Kwon    
GitHub serves as a platform for collaborative software development, where contributors engage, evolve projects, and shape the community. This study presents a novel approach to analyzing GitHub activity that departs from traditional methods. Using Discre... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Diogo F. P. Cunha, Rui Dias, Manuel J. L. F. Rodrigues and Mikhail I. Vasilevskiy    
In the majority of experiments targeting nonlinear optical phenomena, the application of high-intensity pulses drives electrons in graphene into a strongly non-equilibrium state. Under these conditions, conventional perturbation theory falls short in exp... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Roman Major, Maciej Gawlikowski, Marcin Surmiak, Karolina Janiczak, Justyna Wiecek, Przemyslaw Kurtyka, Martin Schwentenwein, Ewa Jasek-Gajda, Magdalena Kopernik and Juergen M. Lackner    
A major medical problem of state-of-the-art heart ventricular assist devices (LVADs) is device-induced thrombus formation due to inadequate blood-flow dynamics generated by the blood pump rotor. The latter is a highly complex device, with difficulties du... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences