Long-Term Geomagnetically Induced Current Observations From New Zealand: Peak Current Estimates for Extreme Geomagnetic Storms
Autor: | Ellen Clarke, Mark A. Clilverd, Alan Thomson, Daniel H. Mac Manus, Tim Divett, Tanja Petersen, Michael Dalzell, Craig J. Rodger |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Return period
Geomagnetic storm Atmospheric Science 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Peak current Storm Space weather 01 natural sciences Confidence interval law.invention Geomagnetically induced current 13. Climate action law Climatology 0103 physical sciences Environmental science Transformer 010303 astronomy & astrophysics 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Space Weather. 15:1447-1460 |
ISSN: | 1542-7390 |
DOI: | 10.1002/2017sw001691 |
Popis: | Geomagnetically induced current (GIC) observations made in New Zealand over 14 years show induction effects associated with a rapidly varying horizontal magnetic field (dBH/dt) during geomagnetic storms. This study analyzes the GIC observations in order to estimate the impact of extreme storms as a hazard to the power system in New Zealand. Analysis is undertaken of GIC in transformer number six in Islington, Christchurch (ISL M6), which had the highest observed currents during the 6 November 2001 storm. Using previously published values of 3,000 nT/min as a representation of an extreme storm with 100 year return period, induced currents of ~455 A were estimated for Islington (with the 95% confidence interval range being ~155–605 A). For 200 year return periods using 5,000 nT/min, current estimates reach ~755 A (confidence interval range 155–910 A). GIC measurements from the much shorter data set collected at transformer number 4 in Halfway Bush, Dunedin, (HWB T4), found induced currents to be consistently a factor of 3 higher than at Islington, suggesting equivalent extreme storm effects of ~460–1,815 A (100 year return) and ~460–2,720 A (200 year return). An estimate was undertaken of likely failure levels for single-phase transformers, such as HWB T4 when it failed during the 6 November 2001 geomagnetic storm, identifying that induced currents of ~100 A can put such transformer types at risk of damage. Detailed modeling of the New Zealand power system is therefore required to put this regional analysis into a global context. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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