Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments

Data from the C-band weather radar located in central Estonia in conjunction with the latest reanalysis of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), ERA5, and Nordic Lightning Information System (NORDLIS) lightning location system data are used to investigate the climatology of...

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Main Authors: Tanel Voormansik, Tuule Müürsepp, Piia Post
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/11/2178
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spelling doaj-f6c5c0d69b9e4fb1baaf44ca1bfee4162021-06-30T23:09:41ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922021-06-01132178217810.3390/rs13112178Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective EnvironmentsTanel Voormansik0Tuule Müürsepp1Piia Post2Institute of Physics, University of Tartu, 50411 Tartu, EstoniaInstitute of Physics, University of Tartu, 50411 Tartu, EstoniaInstitute of Physics, University of Tartu, 50411 Tartu, EstoniaData from the C-band weather radar located in central Estonia in conjunction with the latest reanalysis of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), ERA5, and Nordic Lightning Information System (NORDLIS) lightning location system data are used to investigate the climatology of convective storms for nine summer periods (2010–2019, 2017 excluded). First, an automated 35-dBZ reflectivity threshold-based storm area detection algorithm is used to derive initial individual convective cells from the base level radar reflectivity. Those detected cells are used as a basis combined with convective available potential energy (CAPE) values from ERA5 reanalysis to find thresholds for a severe convective storm in Estonia. A severe convective storm is defined as an area with radar reflectivity at least 51 dBZ and CAPE at least 80 J/kg. Verification of those severe convective storm areas with lightning data reveals a good correlation on various temporal scales from hourly to yearly distributions. The probability of a severe convective storm day in the study area during the summer period is 45%, and the probability of a thunderstorm day is 54%. Jenkinson Collison’ circulation types are calculated from ERA5 reanalysis to find the probability of a severe convective storm depending on the circulation direction and the representativeness of the investigated period by comparing it against 1979–2019. The prevailing airflow direction is from SW and W, whereas the probability of the convective storm to be severe is in the case of SE and S airflow. Finally, the spatial distribution of the severe convective storms shows that the yearly mean number of severe convective days for the 100 km<sup>2</sup> grid cell is mostly between 3 and 8 in the distance up to 150 km from radar. Severe convective storms are most frequent in W and SW parts of continental Estonia.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/11/2178convective stormsweather radarreanalysis dataclimatologylightningautomated detection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tanel Voormansik
Tuule Müürsepp
Piia Post
spellingShingle Tanel Voormansik
Tuule Müürsepp
Piia Post
Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments
Remote Sensing
convective storms
weather radar
reanalysis data
climatology
lightning
automated detection
author_facet Tanel Voormansik
Tuule Müürsepp
Piia Post
author_sort Tanel Voormansik
title Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments
title_short Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments
title_full Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments
title_fullStr Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments
title_full_unstemmed Climatology of Convective Storms in Estonia from Radar Data and Severe Convective Environments
title_sort climatology of convective storms in estonia from radar data and severe convective environments
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Data from the C-band weather radar located in central Estonia in conjunction with the latest reanalysis of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), ERA5, and Nordic Lightning Information System (NORDLIS) lightning location system data are used to investigate the climatology of convective storms for nine summer periods (2010–2019, 2017 excluded). First, an automated 35-dBZ reflectivity threshold-based storm area detection algorithm is used to derive initial individual convective cells from the base level radar reflectivity. Those detected cells are used as a basis combined with convective available potential energy (CAPE) values from ERA5 reanalysis to find thresholds for a severe convective storm in Estonia. A severe convective storm is defined as an area with radar reflectivity at least 51 dBZ and CAPE at least 80 J/kg. Verification of those severe convective storm areas with lightning data reveals a good correlation on various temporal scales from hourly to yearly distributions. The probability of a severe convective storm day in the study area during the summer period is 45%, and the probability of a thunderstorm day is 54%. Jenkinson Collison’ circulation types are calculated from ERA5 reanalysis to find the probability of a severe convective storm depending on the circulation direction and the representativeness of the investigated period by comparing it against 1979–2019. The prevailing airflow direction is from SW and W, whereas the probability of the convective storm to be severe is in the case of SE and S airflow. Finally, the spatial distribution of the severe convective storms shows that the yearly mean number of severe convective days for the 100 km<sup>2</sup> grid cell is mostly between 3 and 8 in the distance up to 150 km from radar. Severe convective storms are most frequent in W and SW parts of continental Estonia.
topic convective storms
weather radar
reanalysis data
climatology
lightning
automated detection
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/11/2178
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