European winter storms: Dynamical aspects and wind gust estimation based on results of regional climate model simulations

Extratropical cyclones in the North Atlantic – European sector are among the most perilous and damaging natural hazards affecting Europe. While most of the severe extratropical cyclones pass by Europe in northeastern direction, a small number of strong storms hit Europe each year. Their destructive...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ludwig, Patrick
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:German
English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/6038/
https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/6038/1/diss_pludwig_final.pdf
Description
Summary:Extratropical cyclones in the North Atlantic – European sector are among the most perilous and damaging natural hazards affecting Europe. While most of the severe extratropical cyclones pass by Europe in northeastern direction, a small number of strong storms hit Europe each year. Their destructive power is mainly related to strong wind gusts, sustained high wind speeds or huge amounts of precipitation. Especially the relation between wind gusts and losses is a current topic of research. The focus of this thesis is to analyse severe extratropical cyclones affecting Europe during the winter half year (winter storms). The investigation of dynamical aspects and mesoscale processes associated with these hazardous extratropical cyclones is based on results from partly high-resolution mesoscale modelling approaches with the regional climate model COSMO-CLM. In the first part of this study, the ability of the COSMO-CLM to simulate severe winter storm events realistic is verified. With this aim, a total of 158 historical winter storms events between 1972 and 2008 are simulated. A new physically based wind gust estimation method, extended by a probabilistic approach, has been implemented to the COSMO-CLM to provide realistic areawide wind gust distributions during the storm passage. In the second part, two recent severe winter storms (Kyrill in January 2007, Xynthia in February 2010) that caused widespread damage and even fatalities are investigated in more detail. Particularly, the dynamical aspects and mesoscale processes affecting their development are considered. In general, the results approve the ability of realistic simulations of severe winter storm events by the COSMO-CLM. Further, the novel introduced wind gust estimation method provides comparable results to existing wind gust estimation methods. The probabilistic extension permits an estimation of the uncertainties of severe gusts at observational sites. This could be utilised as a valuable application when forecasting severe winter storm events to determine ...