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Climatology of meteorological “bombs” in the New Zealand region
Authors:L M Leslie  M Leplastrier  B W Buckley  L Qi
Institution:(1) School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA;(2) Centre for Environmental Modelling and Prediction, School of Mathematics, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia;(3) Climate Analyst, Insurance Australia Group, Sydney, New South Wales;(4) Bureau of Meteorology, West Perth, Western Australia
Abstract:Summary The purpose of this paper is to present a recently developed climatology of explosively developing south eastern Tasman Sea extra-tropical cyclones, or meteorological “bombs”, using a latitude dependent definition for meteorological bombs based on that of Simmonds and Keay (2000a, b), and Lim and Simmonds (2002). These highly transient systems, which have a damaging impact upon New Zealand, are frequently accompanied by destructive winds, flood rains, and coastal storm surges. Two cases are selected from the climatology and briefly described here. The first case study is the major flood and storm force wind event of June 20 to 21, 2002 that affected the Coromandel Peninsula region of the North Island of New Zealand. The second case was a “supercyclone” bomb that developed well to the southwest of New Zealand region during May 29 to 31, 2004, but which could easily have formed in the New Zealand region with catastrophic consequences. It was well-captured by the new high resolution Quikscat scatterometer instrument.This study extends the work of two of the authors (Buckley and Leslie, 2004; Buckley and Leslie, 2000; Qi and Leslie, 2000), on southern hemisphere meteorological bombs, to yet another geographical location. Here, we relied heavily on surface observations, scatterometer and other satellite-derived data, and weather radar imagery in developing the climatology.
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