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Research program: Drivers of spatial and temporal climate variability in extra-tropical Australia
Australia’s climate is profoundly affected by the interaction of the oceans with the atmosphere as seen by the effects of the El Nino Southern Oscillation and the Indian Ocean Dipole.
Through exploring the slow-moving oceanic drivers of climate change, the Centre’s researchers can reveal long-term changes. This will allow researchers to estimate rainfall variability over the coming decades, determine the global climate phenomena that will impact Australia and uncover feedback mechanisms between the ocean and atmosphere that may affect weather patterns years ahead.
This research will dramatically improve our understanding of the large ocean and atmosphere interactions and give Australia the capacity to predict and prepare for climate conditions long before they manifest.
Chief Investigators
Partner Investigators
- Professor Rowan Sutton (National Centre for Atmospheric Science, UK)
- Dr Peter Stott (Hadley Centre, UK)
- Dr Harry Hendon (CAWCR-BoM)
- Dr Scott Power (CAWCR-BoM), Dr Penny Whetton (CAWCR-CSIRO)
- Dr Carsten Frederiksen (CAWCR-BoM)
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 10
09 November 2011
And so here I am in the Male International Airport, waiting to board my plane back home. It was a wild ride on the 50-seater from Gan to Male, though I should've expected that from radar and satellite images revealing intense convective activity there over the past few days. |
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 9
03 November 2011
The radars deployed here on Gan Island run 24/7 until the end of the DYNAMO field campaign in March next year. Consequently, every day is a working day. This is the nature of fieldwork. |
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