Quantitative assessment of offshore wind speed variability
using fractal analysis
Z.R. Shu,P.W. Chan,Q.S. Li,Y.C. He,Bowen Yan
Abstract
Proper understanding of offshore wind speed variability is of essential importance in practice, which provides useful
information to a wide range of coastal and marine activities. In this paper, long-term wind speed data recorded at various offshore stations
are analyzed in the framework of fractal dimension analysis. Fractal analysis is a well-established data analysis tool, which is particularly
suitable to determine the complexity in time series from a quantitative point of view. The fractal dimension is estimated using the
conventional box-counting method. The results suggest that the wind speed data are generally fractals, which are likely to exhibit a persistent
nature. The mean fractal dimension varies from 1.31 at an offshore weather station to 1.43 at an urban station, which is mainly associated
with surface roughness condition. Monthly variability of fractal dimension at offshore stations is well-defined, which often possess larger
values during hotter months and lower values during winter. This is partly attributed to the effect of thermal instability. In addition, with an
increase in measurement interval, the mean and minimum fractal dimension decrease, whereas the maximum and coefficient of variation
increase in parallel.
Z.R. Shu:Department of Civil Engineering, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, United Kingdom
P.W. Chan:Hong Kong Observatory, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Q.S. Li:Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Y.C. He:Joint Research Center for Engineering Structure Disaster Prevention and Control, Guangzhou University
Bowen Yan:Chongqing University, Key Laboratory of New Technology for Construction of Cities in Mountain Area,
Ministry of Education, School of Civil Engineering, Chongqing
PDF Viewer
Preview is limited to the first 3 pages. Sign in to access the full PDF.