G
Gregor C. Leckebusch
Researcher at University of Birmingham
Publications - 95
Citations - 5523
Gregor C. Leckebusch is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Storm & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 87 publications receiving 4958 citations. Previous affiliations of Gregor C. Leckebusch include University of Cologne & Free University of Berlin.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Extra-tropical cyclones in the present and future climate: a review
TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive review of the actual knowledge on climatologies of mid-latitude cyclones for the Northern and Southern Hemisphere for the present climate and for its possible changes under anthropogenic climate conditions is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI
IMILAST: A Community Effort to Intercompare Extratropical Cyclone Detection and Tracking Algorithms
Urs Neu,Mirseid Akperov,Nina Bellenbaum,Rasmu S. Benestad,Richard Blender,Rodrigo Caballero,Angela Cocozza,Helen F. Dacre,Yang Feng,Klaus Fraedrich,Jens Grieger,Sergey Gulev,John Hanley,Tim Hewson,Masaru Inatsu,Kevin Keay,Sarah F. Kew,Ina Kindem,Gregor C. Leckebusch,Margarida L. R. Liberato,Piero Lionello,Igor I. Mokhov,Joaquim G. Pinto,Christoph C. Raible,Marco Reale,Irina Rudeva,Mareike Schuster,Ian Simmonds,Mark R. Sinclair,Michael Sprenger,Natalia Tilinina,Isabel F. Trigo,Sven Ulbrich,Uwe Ulbrich,Xiaolan L. Wang,Heini Wernli +35 more
TL;DR: In this article, the variability of results from different automated methods of detection and tracking of extratropical cyclones is assessed in order to identify uncertainties related to the choice of method.
Journal ArticleDOI
The 2003 European summer heatwaves and drought - synoptic diagnosis and impacts
Andreas H. Fink,Tim Brücher,Andreas Krüger,Gregor C. Leckebusch,Joaquim G. Pinto,Uwe Ulbrich +5 more
TL;DR: Schär et al. as discussed by the authors reported that the 2003 European summer heatwaves and drought were synoptic diagnosis and impacts, and that the impacts of its dryness were augmented by high evapotranspiration rates and drought conditions during the previous spring.
Journal ArticleDOI
IMILAST – a community effort to intercompare extratropical cyclone detection and tracking algorithms: assessing method-related uncertainties
Urs Neu,Mirseid Akperov,Nina Bellenbaum,Rasmus Benestad,Richard Blender,Rodrigo Caballero,Angela Cocozza,Helen F. Dacre,Yang Feng,Klaus Fraedrich,Jens Grieger,Sergey Gulev,John Hanley,Tim Hewson,Masaru Inatsu,Kevin Keay,Sarah F. Kew,Ina Kindem,Gregor C. Leckebusch,Margarida L. R. Liberato,Piero Lionello,Igor I. Mokhov,Joaquim G. Pinto,Christoph C. Raible,Marco Reale,Irina Rudeva,Mareike Schuster,Ian Simmonds,Mark R. Sinclair,Michael Sprenger,Natalia Tilinina,Isabel F. Trigo,Sven Ulbrich,Uwe Ulbrich,Xiaolan L. Wang,Heini Wernli +35 more
TL;DR: In this article, the variability of results from different automated methods of detection and tracking of extratropical cyclones is assessed in order to identify uncertainties related to the choice of method.
Journal ArticleDOI
Changing Northern Hemisphere Storm Tracks in an Ensemble of IPCC Climate Change Simulations
TL;DR: In this paper, an ensemble of 23 single runs from 16 coupled global climate models (CGCMs) were used to compute the storm-track activity over the Northern Hemisphere and its changes in a greenhouse gas scenario (the Special Report on Emission Scenarios A1B forcing).