Abstract

Abstract. This study analyzes the cause of the rare occurrence of a winter hailstorm over New Delhi/NCR (National Capital Region), India. The absence of increased surface temperature or low level of moisture incursion during winter cannot generate the deep convection required for sustaining a hailstorm. Consequently, NCR shows very few cases of hailstorms in the months of December-January-February, making the winter hail formation a question of interest. For this study, a recent winter hailstorm event on 17 January 2013 (16:00–18:00 UTC) occurring over NCR is investigated. The storm is simulated using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model with the Goddard Cumulus Ensemble (GCE) microphysics scheme with two different options: hail and graupel. The aim of the study is to understand and describe the cause of hailstorm event during over NCR with a comparative analysis of the two options of GCE microphysics. Upon evaluating the model simulations, it is observed that the hail option shows a more similar precipitation intensity with the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) observation than the graupel option does, and it is able to simulate hail precipitation. Using the model-simulated output with the hail option; detailed investigation on understanding the dynamics of hailstorm is performed. The analysis based on a numerical simulation suggests that the deep instability in the atmospheric column led to the formation of hailstones as the cloud formation reached up to the glaciated zone promoting ice nucleation. In winters, such instability conditions rarely form due to low level available potential energy and moisture incursion along with upper level baroclinic instability due to the presence of a western disturbance (WD). Such rare positioning is found to be lowering the tropopause with increased temperature gradient, leading to winter hailstorm formation.

Highlights

  • An unusual winter hailstorm occurred over National Capital Region (NCR)/New Delhi, India on 17 January 2013 (16:00– 18:00 UTC)

  • The large-scale circulation showed a deep trough being formed over the region comprising of western Indian and Pakistan in model fields and corresponding ModernEra Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA) observational analysis

  • This study investigates the cause of hailstorm during winter over NCR

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An unusual winter hailstorm occurred over National Capital Region (NCR)/New Delhi, India on 17 January 2013 (16:00– 18:00 UTC). The Indian climate is divided into four seasons; premonsoon (March-April-May), monsoon (June-July-AugustSeptember), post-monsoon (October–November) and winter (December-January-February) (Attri and Tyagi, 2010). With such a classification, a pattern is observed, where most hailstorms cases over NCR dominate during the warmer periods of pre-monsoon and monsoon months. Out of the 33 hailstorm cases, only 5 occur during the colder/winter period (with January showing only 2 cases). Winter hailstorms can be considered a rare occurrence over NCR. With such a distinction between summer and winter hailstorms, it can be hypothesized that the mechanisms of these two kinds of hailstorms are different, which are deliberated in the following paragraphs

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call