Black nor'easter
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A black nor'easter is a persistent and potentially violent north-easterly storm that occurs on the east coast of Australia, particularly from southeastern Queensland to southern New South Wales, usually between late spring and early autumn, about two days a year (or more, depending on the intensity).[1]
Developing offshore as a deep coastal trough, the storm is heralded by the rapid build-up of dense black cloud that brings heavy rainfall and strong northeasterly winds along the east coast of Australia. A black nor'easter can be a combination of surface troughs, onshore flow, and a low.[1] The storm system may cool down warm days due to the persistent blanket of thick moisture-rich clouds.[2]
Although not convection-driven, the north-east wind field leading warm moist tropical air to the subtropics and mid-latitudes can combine with a higher level cut off low from the Southern Ocean. Black nor'easters were first recorded during the 19th century and were so-named because the affiliated darkness (of the moisture-loaded clouds) can transform the day to as dark as twilight.[3]

The cause of a black nor'easter is the gathering of moist cooler air from the south and the tropical humid flow from the north, where north easterly winds aggregate with the moisture, thereby creating dark, rain-filled clouds.[4] The first description of a black nor'easter was presented by the Sydney Morning Herald on 30 October 1911, where it described a black nor'easter in southern New South Wales:[5][6]
Conditions were undergoing a change, which portended unsettled, thundery weather with rain in scattered parts of the State. Yesterday afternoon a black nor'-easter raged, the wind attaining a mean average velocity of 26 miles.
Northeasterly sea breezes are a common occurrence on the NSW coast during summer, generated by temperature imbalances between the sea and the land. A broader synoptic pattern however can greatly intensify these onshore winds, which results in a "Black Nor'easter", so-named because of its dark grey to virtually black clouds and the moist gale-force winds (around 60 kilometres per hour) brought on by intense high-pressure systems, thus eventually bringing thunderstorms, dramatic rainfall and at times hail.[7]
Unlike an East coast low (ECL), which tends to occur in the cool months, a black nor'easter occurs in the warm months and originates from the northeast, although a black nor'easter can turn into an east coast low as it heads south, such as in the case of the 2022 Eastern Australia flood event.[8][9] Also unlike ECL's, black nor'easters can heavily affect inland areas of New South Wales and Queensland.[1]
Formation

Black nor'easters are generally cut-off low systems that simultaneously interact with moisture-laden coastal troughs, which pull in humid tropical airflow (i.e. atmospheric river) from the north, whereby the cold upper air cools down the warmer, saturated air, forcing a lot of moisture to fall as rain. This interaction is oftentimes a formula for heavy rainfall and flooding on the east coast. Black nor'easters can be intensified by warm sea temperatures on the East Australian Current (EAC).[10]
Forecaster Craig Brokensha, describes a black nor'easter; "an unstable low pressure trough drifting from inland Australia, moisture feeding into another trough sitting adjacent the East Coast, with the two predicted to combine."[5] They can also be formed by a cool pool of air that arrive from the Great Australian Bight, whereby spurring a low-pressure system over the southeast simultaneously as a moisture-rich coastal trough (fueled by warm sea temperature) – This can cause higher evaporation, thereby raising the amount of liquid in the atmosphere. When this moisture is brought south by moist northeasterly winds and chilled by the cooler air in the upper-level low higher up, it condenses and falls as rain.[11]
Referred as an anticyclone intensification and usually intensified by a blocking high, the nor'easter causes a sharp leap in wave heights from the east-northeast for the east coast, conjuring a strong north-east air current and east-north east storm waves over the western Tasman Sea. The winds ofttimes produce large waves and, when combined with an east coast low, they bring forth the most intense storm wave environment.[5]
Incidents
Due to the strong winds caused by the Black Nor'easterly storms, a number of people in New South Wales (especially in Sydney) have been killed by falling trees.[12][13][14] Furthermore, such storms also bring torrential floods, strike down power lines (where thousands of homes and businesses would be left without electricity) and collapse roofs.[8]
