A first insight into the hail distribution over Germany
- Deutscher Wetterdienst, Hydrometeorology, Germany (tabea.wilke@dwd.de)
Since major hail events are quite rare in Germany, there is a lack of information in hail occurrence, size and its spatio-temporal distribution. As hailstorms are often locally very limited events, the hail distribution is hard to analyze precisely. Hail reports can only give a first intuition about the amount of hail overall. There might be a bias in the amount of reports towards too many reports in highly populated areas, which could lead to an underrepresentation of reports in rural and sparsely populated areas. Areal information from weather radar networks can overcome this issue with a high spatio-temporal resolution. As an addition, data from the German Insurance Association (GDV) about damages through hail serve as a very certain source for hail occurrence.
The German radar network consists of 17 dual-polarimetric radar systems, which cover Germany more or less completely. For the analysis of the hail distribution, the Maximum Expected Size of Hail (MESH) and a method based on Vertical Integrated Ice (VII) are used to estimate the hail size. Those sizes are reduced to thresholds to obtain where hail is reasonable or have a significant large size. The results of MESH and VII are finally compared to the eyewitness reports sent to the European Severe Weather Database and the WarnWetter-App. An important comparison are the loss data by the GDV. It can give further insides into the amount and the size of hail.
How to cite: Wilke, T., Schultze, M., and Lengfeld, K.: A first insight into the hail distribution over Germany, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-7244, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-7244, 2023.