- 1Department Meteorology and Geophysics Faculty of Physics Sofia University "St.Kliment Ohridski"
- 2National Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology, Forecasts and information services, Sofia, Bulgaria (martin.slavchev@meteo.bg)
- 3Hail Suppression Agency,
Use of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) tropospheric products to derive water vapour is a well established technique for atmospheric monitoring in Europe (GNSS meteorology). GNSS meteorology establishment across Europe was achieved within COST Action ES1206 ”Advanced Global Navigation Satellite Systems tropospheric products for monitoring severe weather events and climate” (GNSS4SWEC). GNSS4SWEC facilitated application of GNSS tropospheric products for severe weather forecasting and nowcasting. Precipitation monitoring during the convective storm season May-September is conducted routinely by the Bulgarian Hail Suppression Agency (HSA). From 2020, in Northwest Bulgaria 4 GNSS stations are processed in near-real time mode and vertically Integrated Water Vapour (IWV) is computed in an operational manner. As a part of a storm nowcasting demonstrator GNSS IWV and Instability Indices (InI) thresholds are implemented for Sofia and Central Bulgaria. In this work site-specific classification functions are computed for Northwest Bulgaria. A GNSS derived monthly IWV threshold separates well precipitation (P) and no precipitation (nP) groups in July, August and September. Probability of detection is between 77-100 % for July and 78-85 % for August. For July the false alarm ratio scores are high in the range 30-66 %, which limits the use of IWV. Classification functions based on InI and IWV have the best performance with an increase of probability of detection score by 16 % in July, 23 % in August, and 20 % in September and decrease of false alarm ratio score by 23 % in July, 22 % in August and 8 % in September.
How to cite: Slavchev, M., Guerova, G., and Dimitrova, T.: Precipitation classification functions for Northwest Bulgaria: GNSS IWV and Instability Indices, 12th European Conference on Severe Storms, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 17–21 Nov 2025, ECSS2025-281, https://doi.org/10.5194/ecss2025-281, 2025.