Resumen
Hurricane storm surges are influenced by several factors, including wind intensity, surface pressure, forward speed, size, angle of approach, ocean bottom depth and slope, shape and geographical features of the coastline. The relative influence of each factor may be amplified or abated by other factors that are acting at the time of the hurricane?s approach to the land. To understand the individual and combined influence of wind intensity, surface pressure and forward speed, a numerical experiment is conducted using Advanced CIRCulation + Simulating Waves Nearshore (ADCIRC + SWAN) by performing hindcasts of Hurricane Rita storm surges. The wind field generated by Ocean Weather Inc. (OWI) is used as the base meteorological forcing in ADCIRC + SWAN. All parameters are varied by certain percentages from those in the OWI wind field. Simulation results are analyzed for maximum wind intensity, wind vector pattern, minimum surface pressure, forward speed, maximum water elevation, station water elevation time series, and high water marks. The results for different cases are compared against each other, as well as with observed data. Changes in the wind intensity have the greatest impact, followed by the forward speed and surface pressure. The combined effects of the wind intensity and forward speed are noticeably different than their individual effects.