Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices

The wintertime (May–October) precipitation across south-eastern Australia, and the Snowy Mountains, was studied for 22 years (1995–2016) to explore the sensitivity of the relationships between six established climate indices and the precipitation to the orography, both regionally and locally in high...

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Main Authors: Michael J. Manton, Steven T. Siems, Yi Huang, Fahimeh Sarmadi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CSIRO Publishing 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
Online Access:https://www.publish.csiro.au/es/pdf/ES19014
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spelling doaj-843e27bb632e48768efb735c600fe5002021-05-26T04:32:18ZengCSIRO PublishingJournal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science2206-58652019-01-01691196204ES19014Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices Michael J. Manton Steven T. Siems Yi HuangFahimeh SarmadiThe wintertime (May–October) precipitation across south-eastern Australia, and the Snowy Mountains, was studied for 22 years (1995–2016) to explore the sensitivity of the relationships between six established climate indices and the precipitation to the orography, both regionally and locally in high-elevation areas. The high-elevation (above 1100 m) precipitation records were provided by an independent network of rain gauges maintained by Snowy Hydro Ltd. These observations were compared with the Australian Water Availability Project (AWAP) precipitation analysis, a commonly used gridded nationwide product. As the AWAP analysis does not incorporate any high-elevation sites, it is unable to capture local orographic precipitation processes. The analysis demonstrates that the alpine precipitation over the Snowy Mountains responds differently to the indices than the AWAP precipitation. In particular, the alpine precipitation is found to be most sensitive to the position of the subtropical ridge and less sensitive to a number of other climate indices tested. This sensitivity is less evident in the AWAP representation of the high-elevation precipitation. Regionally, the analysis demonstrates that the precipitation to the east of the Snowy Mountains (the downwind precipitation) is weakly correlated with the upwind and peak precipitation. This is consistent with previous works that found that the precipitation in this downwind region commonly occurs from mechanisms other than storm systems passing over the mountains.https://www.publish.csiro.au/es/pdf/ES19014
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael J. Manton
Steven T. Siems
Yi Huang
Fahimeh Sarmadi
spellingShingle Michael J. Manton
Steven T. Siems
Yi Huang
Fahimeh Sarmadi
Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices
Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
author_facet Michael J. Manton
Steven T. Siems
Yi Huang
Fahimeh Sarmadi
author_sort Michael J. Manton
title Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices
title_short Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices
title_full Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices
title_fullStr Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the Australian Snowy Mountains to regional climate indices
title_sort sensitivity of the orographic precipitation across the australian snowy mountains to regional climate indices
publisher CSIRO Publishing
series Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
issn 2206-5865
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The wintertime (May–October) precipitation across south-eastern Australia, and the Snowy Mountains, was studied for 22 years (1995–2016) to explore the sensitivity of the relationships between six established climate indices and the precipitation to the orography, both regionally and locally in high-elevation areas. The high-elevation (above 1100 m) precipitation records were provided by an independent network of rain gauges maintained by Snowy Hydro Ltd. These observations were compared with the Australian Water Availability Project (AWAP) precipitation analysis, a commonly used gridded nationwide product. As the AWAP analysis does not incorporate any high-elevation sites, it is unable to capture local orographic precipitation processes. The analysis demonstrates that the alpine precipitation over the Snowy Mountains responds differently to the indices than the AWAP precipitation. In particular, the alpine precipitation is found to be most sensitive to the position of the subtropical ridge and less sensitive to a number of other climate indices tested. This sensitivity is less evident in the AWAP representation of the high-elevation precipitation. Regionally, the analysis demonstrates that the precipitation to the east of the Snowy Mountains (the downwind precipitation) is weakly correlated with the upwind and peak precipitation. This is consistent with previous works that found that the precipitation in this downwind region commonly occurs from mechanisms other than storm systems passing over the mountains.
url https://www.publish.csiro.au/es/pdf/ES19014
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