Journal article

The contributions of fronts, lows and thunderstorms to southern Australian rainfall

AS Pepler, AJ Dowdy, P van Rensch, I Rudeva, JL Catto, P Hope

Climate Dynamics | Published : 2020

Open access

Abstract

A systematic analysis of the main weather types influencing southern Australian rainfall is presented for the period 1979–2015. This incorporates two multi-method datasets of cold fronts and low pressure systems, which indicate the more robust fronts and lows as distinguished from the weaker and less impactful events that are often indicated only by a single method. The front and low pressure system datasets are then combined with a dataset of environmental conditions associated with thunderstorms, as well as datasets of warm fronts and high pressure systems. The results demonstrate that these weather types collectively account for about 86% of days and more than 98% of rainfall in Australia..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This project is funded by the Victorian Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning with support from the Earth Systems and Climate Change Hub of the Australian Government's National Environmental Science Programme, and was assisted by resources from the Australian National Computational Infrastructure (NCI).