Journal article
A climatology of atmospheric pressure jumps over southeastern Australia
L Davies, MJ Reeder, TP Lane
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | Royal Meteorological Society | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1002/qj.2933
Abstract
Black Saturday provided the first evidence of an atmospheric bore affecting the behaviour of a bushfire. As the bore passed, the fire unexpectedly strengthened. This behaviour highlighted the lack of understanding of how common bores are in the southeastern part of Australia, a region of relatively high bushfire risk. The present study addresses that lack of understanding. Pressure jumps are identified in the 1 min records at four automatic weather stations in southeastern Australia by correlating the pressure time series with a large-amplitude step function. These jumps are then separated into two classes: bores and frontal pressure jumps. Bores are defined as pressure jumps without a chang..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Australian Research Council grants DP1093148 and DP130101866. Danijel Belusic is thanked for providing the code used to detect the pressure jumps. The AWS data were supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology.