Abstract

Abstract. In Switzerland, hail regularly occurs in multi-day hail clusters. The atmospheric conditions prior to and during multi-day hail clusters are described and contrasted to the conditions prior to and during isolated hail days. The analysis focuses on hail days that occurred between April and September 2002–2019 within 140 km of the Swiss radar network. Hail days north and south of the Alps are defined using a minimum area threshold of a radar-based hail product. Multi-day clusters are defined as 5 d windows containing 4 or 5 hail days and isolated hail days as 5 d windows containing a single hail day. The reanalysis ERA-5 is used to study the large-scale flow in combination with objectively identified cold fronts, atmospheric blocking events, and a weather type classification. Both north and south of the Alps, isolated hail days have frequency maxima in May and August–September, whereas clustered hail days occur mostly in July and August. Composites of atmospheric variables indicate a more stationary and meridionally amplified atmospheric flow both north and south of the Alps during multi-day hail clusters. On clustered hail days north of the Alps, blocks are more frequent over the North Sea, and surface fronts are located farther from Switzerland than on isolated hail days. Clustered hail days north of the Alps are also characterized by significantly higher most unstable convective available potential energy (MUCAPE) values, warmer daily maximum surface temperatures, and higher atmospheric moisture content than isolated hail days. Hence, both stationary flow conditions and anomalous amounts of moisture are necessary for multi-day hail clusters on the north side. In contrast, differences in MUCAPE on the south side between clustered hail days and isolated hail days are small. The mean sea level pressure south of the Alps is significantly deeper, the maximum temperature is colder, and local moisture is significantly lower on isolated hail days. Both north and south of the Alps, the upper-level atmospheric flow over the eastern Atlantic is meridionally more amplified 3 d prior to clustered hail days than prior to isolated days. Moreover, blocking occurs prior to more than 10 % of clustered hail days over Scandinavia, but no blocks occur prior to isolated hail days. Half of the clustered hail days south of the Alps are also clustered north of the Alps. On hail days clustering only south of the Alps, fronts are more frequently located on the Alpine ridge, and local low-level winds are stronger. The temporal clustering of hail days is coupled to specific synoptic- and local-scale flow conditions; this information may be exploited for short- to medium-range forecasts of hail in Switzerland.

Highlights

  • In Switzerland, hail days can occur several days in a row

  • There are fewer fronts over western Europe on clustered hail days than on isolated hail days, and the fronts are located further from northern Switzerland (Fig. 6). This difference in front locations points to thermo-topographic winds being more relevant for convection initiation during clustered hail days, whereas prefrontal convergence and prefrontal orographic flow could be more relevant for the initiation of hailstorms on isolated hail days (Schemm et al, 2016; Nisi et al, 2020)

  • For the regions both north and south of the Alps, the largescale atmospheric flow over the east Atlantic and Europe prior to and during clustered hail days is more amplified meridionally and characterized by a trough located in the east Atlantic

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Summary

Introduction

In Switzerland, hail days can occur several days in a row. Such multi-day clusters of hail days can cause substantial damage in a short time. The atmospheric conditions associated with hail in Switzerland and central Europe are well studied H. Barras et al.: Multi-day hail clusters and isolated hail days in Switzerland

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