scholarly journals Exceptional sequence of severe thunderstorms and related flash floods in May and June 2016 in Germany. Part I: Meteorological background

Author(s):  
D. Piper ◽  
M. Kunz ◽  
F. Ehmele ◽  
S. Mohr ◽  
B. Mühr ◽  
...  

Abstract. During a 15-day episode from 26 May until 09 June 2016, Germany was affected by an exceptionally large number of severe thunderstorms. Heavy rainfall, related flash floods and creek flooding, hail and tornadoes caused substantial losses running into billions of Euros (EUR). This paper analyzes the key features of the severe thunderstorm episode using extreme value statistics, an aggregated precipitation severity index, and two different objective weather type classification schemes. It is shown that the thunderstorm episode was caused by the interaction of high moisture content, low thermal stability, weak wind speed, and large-scale lifting by surface lows, persisting over almost 2 weeks due to atmospheric blocking. For the long-term assessment of the recent thunderstorm episode, we draw comparisons to a 55-years period (1960–2014) regarding clusters of convective days with variable length (2–15 days) based on precipitation severity, convection-favoring weather patterns and compound events with low stability and weak flow. It is found that clusters with more than eight consecutive convective days are very rare. For example, a 10-day cluster with convective weather patterns prevailing during the recent thunderstorm episode has a probability of only 0.01 %.

2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 2835-2850 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Piper ◽  
Michael Kunz ◽  
Florian Ehmele ◽  
Susanna Mohr ◽  
Bernhard Mühr ◽  
...  

Abstract. During a 15-day episode from 26 May to 9 June 2016, Germany was affected by an exceptionally large number of severe thunderstorms. Heavy rainfall, related flash floods and creek flooding, hail, and tornadoes caused substantial losses running into billions of euros (EUR). This paper analyzes the key features of the severe thunderstorm episode using extreme value statistics, an aggregated precipitation severity index, and two different objective weather-type classification schemes. It is shown that the thunderstorm episode was caused by the interaction of high moisture content, low thermal stability, weak wind speed, and large-scale lifting by surface lows, persisting over almost 2 weeks due to atmospheric blocking.For the long-term assessment of the recent thunderstorm episode, we draw comparisons to a 55-year period (1960–2014) regarding clusters of convective days with variable length (2–15 days) based on precipitation severity, convection-favoring weather patterns, and compound events with low stability and weak flow. It is found that clusters with more than 8 consecutive convective days are very rare. For example, a 10-day cluster with convective weather patterns prevailing during the recent thunderstorm episode has a probability of less than 1 %.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanna Mohr ◽  
Jannik Wilhelm ◽  
Jan Wandel ◽  
Michael Kunz ◽  
Raphael Portmann ◽  
...  

Abstract. Over 3 weeks in May and June 2018, an exceptionally large number of thunderstorms hit vast parts of western and central Europe, causing precipitation accumulations of up to 80 mm within 1 h and several flash floods. This study examines the conditions and processes that made this particular thunderstorm episode exceptional, with a particular focus on the interaction of processes across scales. During the episode, a blocking situation persisted over northern Europe. Initially, the southwesterly flow on the western flank of the blocking anticyclone induced the advection of warm, moist, and unstably stratified air masses. Due to the low-pressure gradient associated with the blocking anticyclone, these air masses were trapped in western and central Europe, remained almost stationary, and prevented a significant air mass exchange. In addition, the weak geopotential height gradients led to predominantly weak flow conditions in the mid-troposphere and thus to low vertical wind shear that prevented thunderstorms from developing into severe organized systems. Due to a weak propagation speed in combination with high rain rates, several thunderstorms were able to accumulate enormous amounts of precipitation that affected local-scale areas and triggered several torrential flash floods. Atmospheric blocking also increased the upper-level cut-off low frequency on its upstream regions, which was up to 10 times higher than the climatological mean. Together with filaments of positive potential vorticity (PV), the cut-offs provided the mesoscale setting for the development of a large number of thunderstorms. During the 22 d study period, more than 50 % of lightning strikes can be linked to a nearby cut-off low or PV filament. The exceptionally persistent low stability over 3 weeks combined with a weak wind speed in the mid-troposphere has not been observed during the past 30 years.


2009 ◽  
Vol 13 (5_suppl) ◽  
pp. S102-S106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aditya K. Gupta ◽  
Elizabeth A. Cooper

Nail psoriasis is common among patients with plaque psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis and has a detrimental effect on quality of life. However, there are currently no standardized therapeutic regimens for nail psoriasis. Traditional treatments for nail psoriasis, which include topical, intralesional, and oral therapies, may be time-consuming, painful, or unsafe when administered long term. Biologic therapies have demonstrated efficacy for plaque psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis; these therapies may be particularly promising for the treatment of nail psoriasis as both groups of patients have an elevated incidence of nail dystrophy. The biologic therapies adalimumab, alefacept, efalizumab, etanercept, and infliximab have demonstrated clinically important nail psoriasis improvements using the Nail Psoriasis Severity Index, a helpful tool that, upon validation, will allow comparison across treatments and trials. Large-scale, long-term trials using standardized outcome measures are needed to further evaluate biologic therapies for the treatment of nail psoriasis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry Mukhin ◽  
Abdel Hannachi

<p>We present a new method for identifying dominant dynamical regimes underlying the observed mid-latitude atmospheric circulation. The method combines the partitioning of recurrence networks and kernel principal component analysis. It enables the detection of significant regimes of variability in addition to obtaining dynamical variables which can be used for regimes embedding. The method is applied to the analysis of geopotential height anomalies of the mid-latitude atmosphere in the Northern hemisphere for the 1981-present winter season. The identified regimes as well as the set of dynamical variables explain large-scale weather patterns, which are associated, e.g., with severe winters over Eurasia and North America. Pronounced inter-annual signatures are also found in the long-term dynamics of the regimes’ frequencies, which are shown to be closely related to the quasi-biennial oscillation of the tropical stratosphere. The method is presented, and prospects for empirical modeling of the atmosphere circulation regimes, and long-term climate predictability are discussed. The work is supported by the Russian Science Foundation (grant 19-42-04121).</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanna Mohr ◽  
Jannik Wilhelm ◽  
Jan Wandel ◽  
Michael Kunz ◽  
Raphael Portmann ◽  
...  

Abstract. Over three weeks in May and June 2018, an exceptionally large number of thunderstorms hit vast parts of western and central Europe, causing precipitation of up to 80 mm and several flash floods. During this time, the large-scale atmospheric circulation, which was characterized by a blocking situation over northern Europe, influenced atmospheric conditions relevant for thunderstorm development. Initially, the southwesterly flow on the western flank of the blocking anticyclone induced the advection of warm, moist, and unstably stratified air masses. Due to a low-pressure gradient associated with the blocking anticyclone, these air masses were trapped in western and central Europe, remained almost stationary and prevented a significant air mass exchange. In addition, the low-pressure gradient led to weak flow conditions in the mid-troposphere and thus to low vertical wind shear that prevented thunderstorms from developing into severe organized systems. Most of the storms formed as local-scale, relatively slow-moving single cells. However, due to the related weak propagation speed, several thunderstorms were able to produce torrential heavy rain that affected local-scale areas and triggered several flash floods. Atmospheric blocking also increased the upper-level cut-off low frequency on its upstream regions, which was up to 10 times higher than the climatological mean. Together with filaments of positive potential vorticity (PV), the cut-offs served as trigger mechanisms for a majority of the thunderstorms. For the 22-day study period, we found that more than 50 % of lightning strikes can be linked to a nearby cut-off low or PV filament. The exceptional persistence of low stability combined with weak wind speed in the mid-troposphere over three weeks has not been observed during the past 30 years.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 309-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Schröter ◽  
M. Kunz ◽  
F. Elmer ◽  
B. Mühr ◽  
B. Merz

Abstract. The summer flood of 2013 set a new record for large-scale floods in Germany for at least the last 60 years. In this paper we analyse the key hydro-meteorological factors using extreme value statistics as well as aggregated severity indices. For the long-term classification of the recent flood we draw comparisons to a set of past large-scale flood events in Germany, notably the high-impact summer floods from August 2002 and July 1954. Our analysis shows that the combination of extreme initial wetness at the national scale – caused by a pronounced precipitation anomaly in the month of May 2013 – and strong, but not extraordinary event precipitation were the key drivers for this exceptional flood event. This provides additional insights into the importance of catchment wetness for high return period floods on a large scale. The database compiled and the methodological developments provide a consistent framework for the rapid evaluation of future floods.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Hoffmann

<p>Persistence or sequences of critical weather patterns over Europe can trigger seasonally extreme hydroclimatic conditions in certain regions. In order to better estimate return periods of extremes across Europe, existing time series of sequences of weather-types over Europe were used to train monthly rules for the transition from one situation to another and their duration behaviour. This can be efficiently realized and tested by setting up decision trees and generating up to 10,000 year time series of weather-type sequences.</p><p>In an experiment carried out, large-scale weather situation types according to Hess/Brezowsky available from 1961 to 2020 were divided into two time periods and rules for the transition were derived for both by training decision trees. Based on the trained rules of transistions for the periods 1961-1990 and 1991-2020, 10,000-year weather-type sequences were then generated and analysed.</p><p>The comparison of the probability density functions of persistence for the 30 different large-scale weather situation types show that omega-like circultion patterns over Europe have a higher tendency to persist in the present time period. In connection with this, the risks of prolonged dry phases in Central Europe have increased. For the translation of different weather-types into local weather-type characteristics, long-term monthly mean daily precipitation values per weather-type was assigned from ERA5 reanalysis data and rearranged in a post-processing step according to the generated weather-type sequences. The analysis of the maximum duration of consecutive dry and wet months in Europe was the main focus and the identified long-term changes in hydroclimatic quantities can be thus exclusively attributed to dynamic factors.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharina Schroeer ◽  
Cornelia Schwierz ◽  
Simona Trefalt ◽  
Alessandro Hering ◽  
Urs Germann

<p>Hailstorms and associated hail stone sizes are a tricky atmospheric hazard to assess, because the processes leading to severe convective weather are complex and the spatiotemporal scales of the impacts are often small. The high natural variability of hail requires expensive high-resolution, area-covering measurements to establish robust statics. Weather radars help to achieve this, but despite growing data archives, records usually do not yet extend to climatological time scales (≥30y), and reference ground observations to calibrate hail algorithms are still fragmentary. Consequentially, there remain substantial uncertainties regarding the long-term hazard of hail. Nevertheless, stakeholders require estimates of return periods for preventive regulations or as input to downstream impact models, e.g., in the insurance and engineering sector.</p><p>In the project “Hail climatology Switzerland” MeteoSwiss partnered up with three federal offices, the insurance and engineering sectors to establish a common national reference of the occurrence of hail in Switzerland. The deliverables include developing return period maps of extreme hail events. However, the definition of such extremes varies across sectors. For example, stakeholders from damage prevention require impact probabilities of the largest hailstorm onto an average rooftop, whereas reinsurance stakeholders are interested in nation-wide worst-case events. Here we report on the approaches we took in deriving the frequencies of severe hail considering the different stakeholder demands and the challenges and uncertainties we thereby encountered.</p><p>Using newly reprocessed gridded radar hail data, we assess frequencies of observed hail occurrence in Switzerland over 19 years (2002-2020). We further developed a probabilistic hazard model using stochastic resampling of hailstorms, driven by large-scale environmental boundary conditions. In order to take a storm-object perspective on extremes, we isolate more than 40’000 individual hailstorm footprints. This allows us to consider local storm properties such as the distributions of hail stone sizes by storm area and duration. In addition, we identify region-dependent extreme storm properties, which is specifically relevant in the Alpine region, where high and complex topography creates sharp climatic gradients and results from other regions are often not easily transferable.</p><p>Results show that observed storm tracks vary strongly between years, and hail footprints vary substantially by storm type. Comparing our results obtained from the longest radar-based hail record so far, we find that the spatial patterns of hail agree well with existing hazard maps derived, i.a., from damage claims. However, we also find that frequencies of local extreme hail stone sizes may have been underestimated in the past. This is further corroborated by a regionally aggregated comparative analysis of the radar record to historical records of very large hail in Switzerland over the past century.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 8125-8166 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Schröter ◽  
M. Kunz ◽  
F. Elmer ◽  
B. Mühr ◽  
B. Merz

Abstract. The summer flood 2013 sets a new record for large-scale floods in Germany since at least 1952. In this paper we analyze the key hydro-meteorological factors using extreme value statistics as well as aggregated severity indices. For the long-term classification of the recent flood we draw comparisons to a set of past large-scale flood events in Germany, notably the high impact summer floods from August 2002 and July 1954. Our analysis shows that the combination of extreme initial wetness at the national scale – caused by a pronounced precipitation anomaly in the month of May 2013 – and strong, but not extraordinary event precipitation were the key drivers for this exceptional flood event. This provides new insights to the importance of antecedent soil moisture for high return period floods on a large-scale. The data base compiled and the methodological developments provide a consistent framework for the rapid evaluation of future floods.


1994 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 29-33
Author(s):  
P. Ambrož

AbstractThe large-scale coronal structures observed during the sporadically visible solar eclipses were compared with the numerically extrapolated field-line structures of coronal magnetic field. A characteristic relationship between the observed structures of coronal plasma and the magnetic field line configurations was determined. The long-term evolution of large scale coronal structures inferred from photospheric magnetic observations in the course of 11- and 22-year solar cycles is described.Some known parameters, such as the source surface radius, or coronal rotation rate are discussed and actually interpreted. A relation between the large-scale photospheric magnetic field evolution and the coronal structure rearrangement is demonstrated.


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