Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data

Monitoring thunderstorms activity is an essential part of operational weather surveillance given their potential hazards, including lightning, hail, heavy rainfall, strong winds or even tornadoes. This study has two main objectives: firstly, the description of a methodology, based on radar and total...

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Main Authors: T. Rigo, N. Pineda, J. Bech
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-09-01
Series:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/10/1881/2010/nhess-10-1881-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-f79dea7e0c82435abe363540a9f944cf2020-11-25T00:22:43ZengCopernicus PublicationsNatural Hazards and Earth System Sciences1561-86331684-99812010-09-011091881189310.5194/nhess-10-1881-2010Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning dataT. RigoN. PinedaJ. BechMonitoring thunderstorms activity is an essential part of operational weather surveillance given their potential hazards, including lightning, hail, heavy rainfall, strong winds or even tornadoes. This study has two main objectives: firstly, the description of a methodology, based on radar and total lightning data to characterise thunderstorms in real-time; secondly, the application of this methodology to 66 thunderstorms that affected Catalonia (NE Spain) in the summer of 2006. An object-oriented tracking procedure is employed, where different observation data types generate four different types of objects (radar 1-km CAPPI reflectivity composites, radar reflectivity volumetric data, cloud-to-ground lightning data and intra-cloud lightning data). In the framework proposed, these objects are the building blocks of a higher level object, the thunderstorm. <br><br> The methodology is demonstrated with a dataset of thunderstorms whose main characteristics, along the complete life cycle of the convective structures (development, maturity and dissipation), are described statistically. The development and dissipation stages present similar durations in most cases examined. On the contrary, the duration of the maturity phase is much more variable and related to the thunderstorm intensity, defined here in terms of lightning flash rate. Most of the activity of IC and CG flashes is registered in the maturity stage. In the development stage little CG flashes are observed (2% to 5%), while for the dissipation phase is possible to observe a few more CG flashes (10% to 15%). Additionally, a selection of thunderstorms is used to examine general life cycle patterns, obtained from the analysis of normalized (with respect to thunderstorm total duration and maximum value of variables considered) thunderstorm parameters. Among other findings, the study indicates that the normalized duration of the three stages of thunderstorm life cycle is similar in most thunderstorms, with the longest duration corresponding to the maturity stage (approximately 80% of the total time). http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/10/1881/2010/nhess-10-1881-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author T. Rigo
N. Pineda
J. Bech
spellingShingle T. Rigo
N. Pineda
J. Bech
Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
author_facet T. Rigo
N. Pineda
J. Bech
author_sort T. Rigo
title Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
title_short Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
title_full Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
title_fullStr Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
title_sort analysis of warm season thunderstorms using an object-oriented tracking method based on radar and total lightning data
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
issn 1561-8633
1684-9981
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Monitoring thunderstorms activity is an essential part of operational weather surveillance given their potential hazards, including lightning, hail, heavy rainfall, strong winds or even tornadoes. This study has two main objectives: firstly, the description of a methodology, based on radar and total lightning data to characterise thunderstorms in real-time; secondly, the application of this methodology to 66 thunderstorms that affected Catalonia (NE Spain) in the summer of 2006. An object-oriented tracking procedure is employed, where different observation data types generate four different types of objects (radar 1-km CAPPI reflectivity composites, radar reflectivity volumetric data, cloud-to-ground lightning data and intra-cloud lightning data). In the framework proposed, these objects are the building blocks of a higher level object, the thunderstorm. <br><br> The methodology is demonstrated with a dataset of thunderstorms whose main characteristics, along the complete life cycle of the convective structures (development, maturity and dissipation), are described statistically. The development and dissipation stages present similar durations in most cases examined. On the contrary, the duration of the maturity phase is much more variable and related to the thunderstorm intensity, defined here in terms of lightning flash rate. Most of the activity of IC and CG flashes is registered in the maturity stage. In the development stage little CG flashes are observed (2% to 5%), while for the dissipation phase is possible to observe a few more CG flashes (10% to 15%). Additionally, a selection of thunderstorms is used to examine general life cycle patterns, obtained from the analysis of normalized (with respect to thunderstorm total duration and maximum value of variables considered) thunderstorm parameters. Among other findings, the study indicates that the normalized duration of the three stages of thunderstorm life cycle is similar in most thunderstorms, with the longest duration corresponding to the maturity stage (approximately 80% of the total time).
url http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/10/1881/2010/nhess-10-1881-2010.pdf
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