Gabrielle is likely to squash local sea level pressure to the lowest values ever observed in New Zealand 鈥 one of several indicators the incoming ex-tropical cyclone will be packing plenty of power as it rolls through over the next three days.
Its wind-making potential - already being demonstrated with gusts higher than 140km/h at Cape Reinga - may also be worsened by the formation of a scorpion tail-like feature called a 鈥渟ting jet鈥.
, with hundreds of millimetres possible for exposed locations like Coromandel and parts of the East Coast.
听are in place for Northland and Gisborne, while orange warnings for heavy rain and strong winds are active for most other regions across the North Island.
Record-breaking pressure
Overnight, Niwa scientists calculated that Gabrielle could break mean sea-level pressure (MSLP) records in or near New Zealand early on Tuesday.
As Niwa meteorologist Ben Noll explained: 鈥淭he tighter the pressure-packing, the stronger the winds, the more intense the weather.鈥
Just as it sounded, MSLP measured atmospheric pressure at mean sea level.
In weather reports and TV forecasts, it鈥檚 represented through isobars joining together areas with the same MSLP (or weight per square area of the air above) and sometimes indicated in pressure-measuring units called hectoPascals (hPa).
Winds tended to blow directly along these isobars, and the closer they were grouped together, the stronger those winds would be.
Tightly-aligned circles of isobars of course denoted low pressure systems, which acted like giant funnels of winds spiralling inward and upwards, forcing warmer air in the centre to rise, before cooling and creating cloud.
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In moderate low pressure systems, hPas dropped from a standard 1013hPa to between 1000hPA and 980hPa 鈥 while deep or intense lows associated with heavy storms carried values below 980hPa.
Early on Tuesday, Gabrielle鈥檚 minimum central pressure could plummet as low as 961hPa.
While there鈥檇 been several cases of pressure levels falling to around 970hPa in some 170 years of records, local values forecast for Gabrielle appeared to be unprecedented.
At the least, meteorologists were placing Gabrielle鈥檚 potential values in the same territory as the 鈥淣orth Island Weather Bomb鈥 of July 2008, in which Cape Reinga measured 963hPA, and the infamous New Zealand cyclone of 1936, where barometers in Auckland pointed to 973.3hPA.
The destructive Cyclone Bola of 1988 registered around 980hPa, while 1968鈥瞫 Giselle 鈥 which led to the Wahine disaster in Cook Strait 鈥 brought levels as low as 964hPa in Wellington.
鈥淲ith Gabrielle, it鈥檚 looking quite likely that it鈥檚 going to deepen or intensify just as it tracks immediately east of Northland and Auckland, or maybe around the top of the Coromandel,鈥 Noll said.
鈥淎nd that deepening and slowing right around the northern New Zealand is what鈥檚 causing concern for forecasters in terms of the amplification of those intense rain and wind impacts.鈥
Noll said this deepening was being caused by an area of 鈥渟pin鈥 in the mid to upper parts of the atmosphere - and being sourced from the Tasman Sea - that was being integrated within the system鈥檚 circulation.
鈥淎s that spin gets wrapped into what鈥檚 left of the cyclone鈥檚 circulation, it causes the wider system to slow down and intensify,鈥 he said.
鈥淭his just goes to show that when we鈥檙e tracking cyclones in New Zealand, it鈥檚 not just the cyclone itself that can cause damaging impacts.
鈥淏ecause we live in the mid-latitudes, we have to consider other pieces of energy that can come in and make things worse.鈥
The 鈥榮ting jet鈥
One such piece was a feature called a sting jet that Gabrielle appeared to be developing now, after its pressure bottomed out at around 958 hPa near Norfolk Island overnight.
This element 鈥 notably seen in Auckland鈥檚 disastrous April 2018 storm - occurred when a zone of strong winds, originating from within the mid-tropospheric cloud head of an explosively deepening depression, were powered up as the jet descended, drying out and evaporating a clear path as it dropped.
This evaporative cooling led to the air within the jet becoming denser, which in turn led to an acceleration of the downward flow.
The jet then began to hook around the system鈥檚 centre - much like the sting from a scorpion鈥檚 tail, hence the name - bringing more damaging winds.
As it happened, the spin area coming in from the Tasman Sea was wrapping into the system and intensifying winds on the southern and western side of the cyclone.
Overnight tomorrow, as the system tracked close to the North Island, a jet of wind in the lower part of the atmosphere was likely to increase and then wrap around the system 鈥 giving the sting in its tail.
鈥淎gain, we need to consider that when cyclones track into our region, their structure changes - and what they鈥檙e influenced by changes as well.鈥
The 鈥榠nverted barometer鈥 effect
Meanwhile, Noll said Gabrielle could also bring an effect that temporarily raised our local mean sea level.
That came as forecasters were warning of big seas around New Zealand鈥檚 north-east coasts 鈥 and particularly off Wairarapa, where combined waves could reach 7m high on Tuesday afternoon, and north-east swells could rise to 6m.
鈥淏ig winds are typically associated with big seas, and this just goes back to the energy we see in these systems,鈥 Noll said.
鈥淏ut there鈥檚 another phenomenon at play here known as the inverted barometer effect, which happens when very low air pressure forces the sea to rise.鈥
A difference of just one hPA could correspond to 1cm of sea level height: although this didn鈥檛 happen cleanly and immediately, but in an average sense and over a large area.
While it was rare for air pressure alone to drive sea levels any more than 30cm higher (or lower, in high-pressure environments) the effect compounded the impact of wind-driven storm surge.
鈥淪o, in addition to the waves, this will be raising that sea level even higher,鈥 Noll said.
鈥淲here we鈥檝e seen wave-overtopping in the past 鈥 places like eastern Coromandel, and eastern Auckland, including Tamaki Drive 鈥 are likely to see that happen again with Gabrielle.鈥
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