Journal article

Sub-synoptic scale features associated with extreme surface gusts during the South Australia Storm of September 2016 – Part I: characteristics of the event

N Earl, I Simmonds, I Rudeva

Weather | WILEY | Published : 2019

Abstract

Winds are one of the major meteorological contributors to deaths, damage and insured losses in Australia. A ‘freak storm’ hit the state of South Australia on 28 September 2016, causing state-wide blackouts and leaving 1.7 million people without power. In the first part of this two-part study, we analyse this event and find that it was indeed extreme, deepening more explosively than all but two Adelaide-affecting extratropical cyclones over the past 37 years and exhibiting the lowest central pressure. This generated hurricane force winds, with the central South Australia site of Neptune Island recording a gust of over 120kmh−1. We show that this storm potentially contained a sting jet. Such j..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

Parts of this research were made possible by funding from the Australian Research Council (ARC) Grant DP16010997. Nick Earl was also supported by the ARC (CE110001028).