A Radar-Based Hail Climatology of Australia
Jordan P. Brook, Joshua S. Soderholm, Alain Protat, Hamish McGowan, Robert A. Warren

TL;DR
This paper presents the first nationwide radar-based hail climatology of Australia, utilizing novel correction and analysis techniques to improve understanding of hailstorm distribution and characteristics across the continent.
Contribution
It introduces new empirical correction and object-based analysis methods to create a comprehensive radar-derived hail climatology for Australia.
Findings
Hailstorms are most frequent in specific regions and seasons.
Radar-based data reveals detailed spatial and temporal hailstorm patterns.
The methodology improves accuracy of hail size and frequency estimates.
Abstract
In Australia, hailstorms present considerable public safety and economic risks, where they are considered the most damaging natural hazard in terms of annual insured losses. Despite these impacts, the current climatological distribution of hailfall across the continent is still comparatively poorly understood. This study aims to supplement previous national hail climatologies, such as those based on environmental proxies or satellite radiometer data, with more direct radar-based hail observations. The heterogeneous and incomplete nature of the Australian radar network complicates this task and prompts the introduction of some novel methodological elements. We introduce an empirical correction technique to account for hail reflectivity biases at C-band, derived by comparing overlapping C- and S-band observations. Furthermore, we demonstrate how object-based hail swath analysis may be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations · Climate variability and models · Precipitation Measurement and Analysis
