Títol
Circulation types related to lightning activity over Catalonia and the Principality of Andorra
Autor/s
Pineda, N.; Trapero Bagué, Laura
Any
2010
Mes
-
Tesi universitat lectura
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Universitat de lectura
Tesi director
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Tesi codirector
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Títol de la revista
Physics and Chemistry of the earth
Pàgines
469-476
Volum de la revista
35
Numero revista
-
Idioma
Anglès
ISBN / ISSN
14747065
Titol obra
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Editorial obra
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Llocpub Obra
-
DOI
10.1016/j.pce.2009.12.009

Accés text complet en obert
Paraules clau
Atmospheric circulation types, Principal Component Analysis, Lightning activity, Type sequences, Frequency of occurrence

Resum
(ENG) In the present study, we use a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) to characterize the surface 6-h circulation types related to substantial lightning activity over the Catalonia area (north-eastern Iberia) and the Principality of Andorra (eastern Pyrenees) from January 2003 to December 2007. The gridded data used for classification of the circulation types is the NCEP Final Analyses of the Global Tropospheric Analyses at 1° resolution over the region 35°N-48°N by 5°W-8°E. Lightning information was collected by the SAFIR lightning detection system operated by the Meteorological Service of Catalonia (SMC), which covers the region studied. We determined nine circulation types on the basis of the S-mode orthogonal rotated Principal Component Analysis. The " extreme scores" principle was used previous to the assignation of all cases, to obtain the number of final types and their centroids. The distinct differences identified in the resulting mean Sea Level Pressure (SLP) fields enabled us to group the types into three main patterns, taking into account their scale/dynamical origin. The first group of types shows the different distribution of the centres of action at synoptic scale associated with the occurrence of lightning. The second group is connected to mesoscale dynamics, mainly induced by the relief of the Pyrenees. The third group shows types with low gradient SLP patterns in which the lightning activity is a consequence of thermal dynamics (coastal and mountain breezes).Apart from reinforcing the consistency of the groups obtained, analysis of the resulting classification improves our understanding of the geographical distribution and genesis factors of thunderstorm activity in the study area, and provides complementary information for supporting weather forecasting. Thus, the catalogue obtained will provide advances in different climatological and meteorological applications, such as nowcasting products or detection of climate change trends.