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  <title><![CDATA[PhD Defense by Kyungmin Park]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p><strong>Ph.D. Defense<br />
Name: Kyungmin Park<br />
Title: Drivers of Coastal Sea Level and Flooding along the East Coast of the United States<br />
Date &amp; Time: Monday, November 21, 2022, 1:00 pm<br />
Location:<br />
In person ES&amp;T L1114<br />
Virtual https://gatech.zoom.us/j/7184656594?pwd=eXdidmkzNm40ekxhcHFIc2dkdmNLQT09<br />
Thesis Advisor: Dr. Emanuele Di Lorenzo (EAS)<br />
Committee Members: Dr. Kevin A. Haas (CEE), Dr. Alexander Robel (EAS), Dr. Joel Kostka<br />
(BIOS), Dr. Tal Ezer (ODU), Dr. Nadia Pinardi (UB)<br />
Summary<br />
Coastal cities and communities are on the frontline as sea-level rise induced by climate change<br />
expands the oceans and re-draws the maps of the coastline. Despite the emerging threats of sealevel<br />
rise and flooding, the current water level observational networks and the modeling<br />
approaches for the U.S. East Coast are inadequate to resolve the combined effects of watershed<br />
loading, the spatiotemporal variations of the extreme water level, and the compound flooding at<br />
the scale of rivers, tributaries, creeks, and City&rsquo;s block during hurricane events. These limitations<br />
pose challenges for understanding, predicting, and mitigating the regional and city-scale impacts<br />
of climate extremes and flooding on coastal communities. They also imply that coastal decisionmakers<br />
and planners are not equipped with adequate tools to inform coastal protection and<br />
management strategies. The main goals of this thesis are to develop large-scale, three-dimensional,<br />
high-resolution coastal models to overcome the limitations of existing technologies and use them<br />
to diagnose the role of extreme water level drivers along the East Coast of the United States.<br />
Accordingly, chapter 1 introduces the drivers of extreme water levels along the U.S. East Coast.<br />
In chapter 2, I present a new modeling system that has been implemented to deliver a 3-day forecast<br />
system in Chatham County (GA). This system that has been operational since 2019 is currently<br />
being used by the Chatham Emergency Management Agency and the City of Savannah to design<br />
new emergency protocols and advance a city-wide resilience planning process. In Chapter 3 I use<br />
this modeling system to conduct a series of hurricane hindcast and sensitivity experiments to<br />
examine the relative roles of extreme water level drivers during major coastal storms and quantify<br />
its contributions to the spatial and temporal patterns of extreme water levels. Specifically, this<br />
chapter investigates the important oceanic responses to hurricane forcing (e.g., change in Gulf<br />
Stream, Ekman transport and Coastally Trapped Waves) compared to the local atmospheric wind<br />
and pressure forcing on the U.S. southeast coast. In Chapter 4, I expand the numerical modeling<br />
capability and domain over the entire U.S. East Coast to examine the persistent high water level<br />
following a hurricane. I find that baroclinic drivers linked to an oceanic adjustment cause the<br />
abnormal increase in water levels even after hurricanes have dissipated, which is twice as high as<br />
the sea-level rise in 100 years (&asymp;34 cm) on the Georgia coast. In Chapter 5, I conclude the works<br />
by discussing how these new insights into the multiple drivers of abnormal water levels, both<br />
during and after hurricane events, fill critical knowledge gaps and data needs necessary to inform<br />
best practices to scientists, engineers and policymakers.</strong></p>
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