Abstract
Abstract. Thunderstorm and lightning climatological research is conducted
with a view to increasing knowledge about the distribution of thunderstorm-related hazards and to gain an understanding of environmental factors
increasing or decreasing their frequency. There are three main methodologies
used in the construction of thunderstorm climatologies: thunderstorm
frequency, thunderstorm tracking or lightning flash density. These
approaches utilise a wide variety of underpinning datasets and employ many
different methods ranging from correlations with potential influencing
factors and mapping the distribution of thunderstorm day frequencies to
tracking individual thunderstorm cell movements. Meanwhile, lightning flash
density climatologies are produced using lightning data alone, and these
studies therefore follow a more standardised format. Whilst lightning flash
density climatologies are primarily concerned with the occurrence of cloud-to-ground lightning, the occurrence of any form of lightning confirms the
presence of a thunderstorm and can therefore be used in the compilation of a
thunderstorm climatology. Regardless of approach, the choice of analysis
method is heavily influenced by the coverage and quality (detection
efficiency and location accuracy) of available datasets as well as by the
controlling factors which are under investigation. The issues investigated
must also reflect the needs of the end-use application to ensure that the
results can be used effectively to reduce exposure to hazard, improve
forecasting or enhance climatological understanding.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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