UC Research Repository

Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to the UC Research Repository

The UC Research Repository collects, stores and makes available original research from postgraduate students, researchers and academics based at the University of Canterbury.

 

Communities

Select a community to browse its collections.

Recent Submissions

ItemOpen Access
The role of avalanche deposition on the mass balance of Rolleston Glacier, Arthur’s Pass, New Zealand.
(2024) Spera, Alison
Avalanches are a crucial source of nourishment for cirque mountain glaciers, supplementing their accumulation and delaying melt. However, their role in glacier mass balance is highly under-studied and overlooking their influences may inaccurately assess glacier health. This thesis investigates the role of avalanches on the Rolleston Glacier mass balance using an Energy Balance Model (EBM) coupled to a mass transport and deposition (MTD) algorithm. A 12-year climate record (2010 – 2022) was used as model input with precipitation factors and temperature lapse rates as tuning parameters. Annual (Bn) and winter balances (Bw) were compared for the glaciological years 2010/11, 2012/13 and 2018/19 with and without the MTD algorithm. The MTD performed better for positive balance years, with optimum precipitation factors and lapse rates applied for different years. To quantify the proportion of winter balance attributed to avalanches, the model was run over the 12-year period. Excluding gravitational processes produced results that were within 1.81 m w.e of directly measured mass balance, while activating the MTD yielded estimates within 0.64 m w.e of the observed. In general, the spatial distribution of the winter balance was improved under the MTD, contributing an additional 1.47 m w.e to the average winter balance across 2010 – 2022. A comparison against probe measurements showed more bias was incurred (2.04 m w.e) when discarding the MTD from the model. The model was validated against cumulative mass balance measurements showing strong R2 relationships when coupled to the MTD (R2 = 0.9) as opposed to scenarios without the MTD (R2 = 0.65). Future work should incorporate a comprehensive sensitivity analysis and parameter optimisation procedures to advance the applications of mass transport algorithms to mass balance models. The results demonstrate that including the MTD has useful applications to simulating more accurate mass balance estimates to avalanche-fed glaciers like Rolleston Glacier and enhances understanding of local-scale alpine processes.
ItemOpen Access
Simulating Solar Storms via Active DC Injection from the HVDC Link
(2023) Lapthorn, Andrew; Hardie , Stewart; Agger , Paul; Subritzky , Soren; Dalzell , Mike; Clilverd , Mark; Cobbett , Neil; Beggan , Ciaran; Huebert , Juliane; Eaton , Eliot; Brundell, James; Rodger , Craig
As part of the MBIE Endeavour programme “Solar Tsunamis: Space-Weather Prediction and Risk Mitigation for New Zealand’s Energy Infrastructure,” we are interested in the effects of geomagnetically induced currents (GICs) on New Zealand’s electrical infrastructure. GICs appear as quasi-dc currents on the power system and can lead to problems in the network as a result of transformer saturation such as increased reactive power demand, increased harmonics, and even overloading of the transformers. Studies have shown that, depending on the severity of the solar storm, these effects could potentially be widespread. Different transformer designs behave differently under these quasi-dc conditions, with single phase designs the worst, and three-limb core designs proving the most resilient. Furthermore, several transformers in New Zealand have neutral earthing resistors (NERs) installed. Therefore, it is difficult to say at what point do GICs start becoming a problem, and how much current is too much current. In January 2023, with the support of Transpower, we were able to utilise New Zealand’s high voltage DC (HVDC) link to inject current directly into the ground at Haywards substation and monitor the effects on two 216 MVA, 220/110 kV autotransformers, along with monitoring of associated transmission lines. Over the span of nine days, six injection tests were carried out lasting between one and two hours each time. The peak current injected into the ground was about 621 A. This paper provides an overview of the testing plan, procedure, and initial results from the collected data.
ItemOpen Access
Central Bank Stabilisation Policy when Capital Flows Matter: Instruments, Targets, and Trade-offs
(2024) Guender, Alfred
This paper examines how policy instruments shape the trade-off between core macroeconomic and financial stability in an open economy where speculative capital flows affect financial market conditions. We derive and contrast the target rules that underpin optimal discretionary policy in four different instrument scenarios, each of which involves one, two or three of the following instruments: the policy rate, an interest rate equalisation tool, and intervention in the foreign exchange market. The analysis reveals a one-to-one correspondence between the policy instruments deployed and the number of target rules that guide the optimal policy. Using more instruments leads to simpler target rules, sharper trade-offs, and increased welfare. The three-instrument case produces the same output-inflation trade-off as the canonical closed-economy New Keynesian model and ensures complete insulation from foreign monetary policy and other demand-side shocks.
ItemOpen Access
OCHT pilot in Ōtautahi
(2024) Kingham, Simon; Curl , Angela; Carroll, Liam