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Legends

Wind Speed

  Description Beaufort kt km/h
icon icon Calm - Light Winds 0-3 0-10 0-19
icon Moderate Winds 4 11-16 20-30
icon Fresh Winds 5 17-21 31-39
icon Strong Winds - Near Gale 6-7 22-33 40-61
icon Gale - Strong Gale 8-9 34-47 62-87
icon Storm - Hurricane 10-12 48+ 88+

Temperature

°C°F
< -5< 23
-5 - 023 - 32
0 - 532 - 41
5 - 1041 - 50
10 - 1550 - 59
15 - 2059 - 68
20 - 2568 - 77
25 - 3077 - 86
30 - 3586 - 95
35 - 4095 - 104
≥ 40≥ 104

Relative Humidity

< 25% 25-50% 50-75% ≥ 75%

Frost Risk

Nil Low Slight Moderate High Severe

UV / Pollen Levels

Low Moderate High Very High Extreme

Radar/Satellite Animator Symbols

Rainfall Intensity

light dBz scale heavy

The intensity of rainfall detected by weather radars is indicated using the above scale.

Doppler Wind

90km/h towards velocity scale 90km/h away

On Doppler radar images the radial component of the movement of particles in the air is indicated using the above scale.

Lightning Events

lightning Lightning strikes are displayed as crosses (ground events) or squares (cloud events) and fade from white (current) to red (30 minutes ago) to blue (60 minutes ago). Positive strikes appear as diagonal crosses.

Accumulated Rainfall (since 9am)

rainfall Rainfall since 9am local time is displayed with coloured dots.

Observations Rose

observations Surface observations are displayed as a 'rose' with temperature, dew point and relative humidity down the left-hand side and rainfall since 9am, pressure and location name displayed down the right-hand side.

Temperatures fade in colour from blue (cold) to red (warm) and dew points fade in colour from blue (moist) to red (dry).

How to Read a Wind Barb
wind barbs

A wind barb is a compact means of representing both wind speed and direction graphically.

Each full-barb represents 10 knots (nautical miles per hour), a half-barb 5 knots and a flag 50 knots. Calm conditions are indicated by a dot only. 1 knot is equal to around 1.9km/h.

In the examples to the left the first indicates a 5 knot wind from the south-west, the second a 15 knot wind from the west-north-west, the third a 45 knot easterly and the fourth a 65 knot northerly.

Warnings

Warnings
Severe weather, thunderstorm, tropical cyclone
Fire weather
Flood
Coastal wind
Graziers, bush walkers, frost

Sentinel Hotspots

Sentinel hotspots detected within the last 6 hours are displayed. Sentinel is a satellite-based national bushfire monitoring system operated by Geoscience Australia.

Sentinel Hotspots
≥ 150°C
≥ 100°C
≥ 50°C
< 50°C

Weather Forecast Icons

icon
Clearing shower
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Cloudy
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Cloud and wind increasing
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Cloud increasing
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Drizzle
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Drizzle clearing
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Fog then sunny
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Frost then sunny
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Hazy
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Heavy rain
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Heavy showers
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Increasing sunshine
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Late shower
icon
Late thunder
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Mostly cloudy
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Mostly sunny
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Overcast
icon
Possible shower
icon
Possible thunderstorm
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Rain
icon
Rain and snow
icon
Rain clearing
icon
Rain developing
icon
Rain tending to snow
icon
Showers
icon
Showers easing
icon
Showers increasing
icon
Snow
icon
Snowfalls clearing
icon
Snow developing
icon
Snow showers
icon
Snow tending to rain
icon
Sunny
icon
Thunderstorms
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Thunderstorms clearing
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Windy
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Windy with rain
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Windy with showers
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Windy with snow
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Wind and rain increasing
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Wind and showers easing

Forest Fire Danger Index

CategoryForest Fire Danger IndexGrassland Fire Danger Index
Catastrophic (Code Red)100 +150 +
Extreme75-99100-149
Severe50-7450-99
Very High25-4925-49
High12-2412-24
Low-Moderate0-110-11

Please note that Weatherzone assumes worst case drought factor in the calculations

Now Temperature

At Darwin Ap

22:20 CST

Tonight

21°C

Tomorrow

34°C

Fog then sunny

fog_then_sunny

Weather News

Police praise Tasmanian pair rescued after emergency satellite message

16:59 EST

A mother and son stranded by rain and snow near Lake McKenzie in Tasmania's north have been rescued after calling for help by satellite messages.

Climate change increasing the intensity and impact of extreme weather, BOM tells emergency managers

16:45 EST

Cyclones are expected to be less likely in the future due to climate change, though the intensity and impact of extreme weather will be greater, according to a senior climatologist with the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM).

Snowiest week of the year cranking up

14:12 EST

The snowiest week of the year has begun with 70-110cm of fresh snow due to fall across the main resorts, taking the natural snow depth to not only a season high but the highest in several years.