Data

AUS2200 Unified Model atmospheric simulation of warmer Coral Sea surface temperatures during the 2022 Brisbane floods, at 2.2km resolution: observed SSTs. v1.0

National Computational Infrastructure
Roberts, Dale ; Petrelli, Paola ; Reid, Kim
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25914/807q-rx33&rft.title=AUS2200 Unified Model atmospheric simulation of warmer Coral Sea surface temperatures during the 2022 Brisbane floods, at 2.2km resolution: observed SSTs. v1.0&rft.identifier=10.25914/807q-rx33&rft.publisher=NCI Australia&rft.description=AUS2200 simulation using the Unified Model (UM) to simulate the warmer Coral Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) during the 2022 Brisbane floods. Between late February and early March 2022, Eastern Australia received record breaking rainfall and experienced devastating flooding. Two simulations that aim to assess the impact of warmer than usual sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the Coral Sea on the extreme rainfall were run. This is the control simulation using the observed SSTs and can be compared with a reduced-sst experiment simulation. The reduced-sst experiment is initialised with climatological monthly mean SSTs from ERA5 averaged over 1960-2019 for the region between -10 to -44 latitude and 143 to 160 longitude. The simulation period is 22-02-2022 to 07-03-2022. This simulation is run using the UM v12.2, forcing are the ECMWF ERA5 and ERA5-Land reanalysis fields and the Bureau of Meteorology's Atmospheric high-resolution Regional Reanalysis for Australia (BARRA-R v1.0) for soil moisture. The simulation was run continuously, differently from other Brisbane floods simulations included in the collection. Be aware that this introduces soil moisture drifting. The output was post-processed using the ACCESS-MOPPeR tool (doi: zenodo.10346217) following wherever possible the CMIP6 conventions. CreditThis data is supported by the Australian Government’s National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS), with access to resources provided through the ACCESS-NRI Merit Allocation Scheme and the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI)This record was harvested by RDA at 2025-06-06T16:34:35.514+10:00 from NCI's Data Catalogue where it was last modified at 2023-10-15.This dataset is an output of the research program - CLEX Weather and Climate Interactions&rft.creator=Roberts, Dale &rft.creator=Petrelli, Paola &rft.creator=Reid, Kim &rft.date=2024&rft.edition=1.0&rft.coverage=northlimit=-6.82; southlimit=-48.80; westlimit=107.52; eastLimit=158.98&rft.coverage=northlimit=-6.82; southlimit=-48.80; westlimit=107.52; eastLimit=158.98&rft_rights= https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International&rft_subject=climatologyMeteorologyAtmosphere&rft_subject=370201 - Climate change processes, 370101 - Adverse weather events, 370105 - Atmospheric Dynamics&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

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Brief description

This record was harvested by RDA at 2025-06-06T16:34:35.514+10:00 from NCI's Data Catalogue where it was last modified at 2023-10-15.

Full description

AUS2200 simulation using the Unified Model (UM) to simulate the warmer Coral Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) during the 2022 Brisbane floods. Between late February and early March 2022, Eastern Australia received record breaking rainfall and experienced devastating flooding. Two simulations that aim to assess the impact of warmer than usual sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the Coral Sea on the extreme rainfall were run. This is the control simulation using the observed SSTs and can be compared with a reduced-sst experiment simulation. The reduced-sst experiment is initialised with climatological monthly mean SSTs from ERA5 averaged over 1960-2019 for the region between -10 to -44 latitude and 143 to 160 longitude. The simulation period is 22-02-2022 to 07-03-2022. This simulation is run using the UM v12.2, forcing are the ECMWF ERA5 and ERA5-Land reanalysis fields and the Bureau of Meteorology's Atmospheric high-resolution Regional Reanalysis for Australia (BARRA-R v1.0) for soil moisture. The simulation was run continuously, differently from other Brisbane floods simulations included in the collection. Be aware that this introduces soil moisture drifting. The output was post-processed using the ACCESS-MOPPeR tool (doi: zenodo.10346217) following wherever possible the CMIP6 conventions.

Credit

This data is supported by the Australian Government’s National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS), with access to resources provided through the ACCESS-NRI Merit Allocation Scheme and the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI)

Lineage

This dataset is an output of the research program - CLEX Weather and Climate Interactions

Created: 17 10 2024

Issued: 02 12 2024

Modified: 10 12 2024

Data time period: 2022-02-22 to 2022-03-07

This dataset is part of a larger collection

158.98,-6.82 158.98,-48.8 107.52,-48.8 107.52,-6.82 158.98,-6.82

133.25,-27.81

text: northlimit=-6.82; southlimit=-48.80; westlimit=107.52; eastLimit=158.98

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