Coupled Fire–Atmosphere Simulations of the Rocky River Fire Using WRF-SFIRE

Author:

Peace Mika1,Mattner Trent2,Mills Graham2,Kepert Jeffrey3,McCaw Lachlan4

Affiliation:

1. Bushfire Cooperative Research Centre, and School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Adelaide, and Bureau of Meteorology, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

2. School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

3. Bureau of Meteorology, and Bushfire Cooperative Research Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

4. Department of Parks and Wildlife, Manjimup, Western Australia, Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe coupled atmosphere–fire spread model “WRF-SFIRE” has been used to simulate a fire where extreme fire behavior was observed. Tall flames and a dense convective smoke column were features of the fire as it burned rapidly up the Rocky River gully on Kangaroo Island, South Australia. WRF-SFIRE simulations of the event show a number of interesting dynamical processes resulting from fire–atmosphere feedback, including the following: fire spread was sensitive to small changes in mean wind direction; fire perimeter was affected by wind convergence resulting from interactions between the fire, atmosphere, and local topography; and the fire plume mixed high-momentum air from above a strong subsidence inversion. At 1-min intervals, output from the simulations showed fire spread exhibiting fast and slow pulses. These pulses occurred coincident with the passage of mesoscale convective (Rayleigh–Bénard) cells in the planetary boundary layer. Simulations show that feedback between the fire and atmosphere may have contributed to the observed extreme fire behavior. The findings raise questions as to the appropriate information to include in meteorological forecasts for fires as well as future use of coupled and uncoupled fire simulation models in both operational and research settings.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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