ECSS2025-221, updated on 08 Aug 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/ecss2025-221
12th European Conference on Severe Storms
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Severe storm research with thundeR package - improvements in calculation procedures of convective parameters
Mateusz Taszarek1,2, Cameron Nixon3, Tomas Pucik4,5, Piotr Szuster2,6,7, Pieter Groenemeijer4,5, Francesco Battaglioli4,5, and Bartosz Czernecki1
Mateusz Taszarek et al.
  • 1Adam Mickiewicz University, Department of Meteorology and Climatology, Poznań, Poland (mateusz.taszarek@amu.edu.pl)
  • 2Skywarn Poland, Warsaw, Poland
  • 3University of Oklahoma, Cooperative Institute for Severe and High-Impact Weather Research and Operations, Norman, United States
  • 4European Severe Storms Laboratory - Science & Training, Wiener Neustadt, Austria
  • 5European Severe Storms Laboratory, Wessling, Germany
  • 6Institute of Meteorology and Water Management - National Research Institute, Warsaw, Poland
  • 7Cracow University of Technology, Cracow, Poland

ThundeR rawinsonde processing package has been under development since 2017. It is a freeware R language package for sounding and hodograph visualization, and rapid computation of convective parameters commonly used in the research and operational prediction of severe convective storms. Ability of the package to calculate more than 300 parameters in ~1 centisecond enables rapid processing of large numerical datasets. Over the recent years thundeR has been applied on global reanalysis datasets, operational numerical weather prediction models, and used to study environments associated with global lightning observations and severe weather reports from Europe, North America, South America and Australia. ThundeR also contributed to development of ESSL’s AR-CHaMo models and was applied by severe storm scientists in several countries, including national hydrometeorological institutes. Construction of environmental datasets collocated with severe storms observations from different parts of the world served as a platform to evaluate the skill of hundreds of convective parameters in predicting specific convective hazards, and allowed to test new parameter ideas through an iterative development process. In this work we will discuss modifications in calculation procedure of existing parameters, which led to more skillful identification of environments supportive of lightning, large hail, tornadoes and severe wind of both severe and significant severe intensity. Examples concern modifications in the calculation procedure of convective inhibition, lifted index or storm-relative helicity, and introduce new ventilation parameter along with two new parcel lifting types: most-unstable-mean-layer (MUML) and most-unstable-above-500m (MU5). Authors will also present examples of how obtained results can be applied in the operational prediction of severe convective storms and modeling their climatology on the global scale.

How to cite: Taszarek, M., Nixon, C., Pucik, T., Szuster, P., Groenemeijer, P., Battaglioli, F., and Czernecki, B.: Severe storm research with thundeR package - improvements in calculation procedures of convective parameters, 12th European Conference on Severe Storms, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 17–21 Nov 2025, ECSS2025-221, https://doi.org/10.5194/ecss2025-221, 2025.