
Hail chasers: Meet the weather detectives trying to decipher why hail is becoming a bigger problem
From mid-May through the end of June, ICECHIP storm chasers traveled across the Front Range of the Rockies and the central Plains, sometimes riding in vehicles armored against falling ice. They launched drones, released weather balloons and set up mobile doppler radars — all techniques honed by tornado chasers.
As one group positioned mobile doppler radars to intercept the storm at close range, other researchers were responsible for releasing weather balloons nearby or setting out sensors to measure the size and velocity of a hail strike.
During some storms, researchers released hundreds of pingpong ball-like devices called hailsondes into the tempests' path to track the life cycle of a hail stone — when it is melting and freezing, and how wind dynamics that lift and drop these chunks of ice affect their growth.
Convective thunderstorms, with big internal updrafts, generate hail by circulating a mix of water and ice crystals into the freezing layers of the upper atmosphere. Hail typically forms at altitudes of 20,000 to 50,000 feet, where temperatures are between minus 22 degrees and 14 degrees Fahrenheit. Those same updrafts sweep hailsondes into the hail-generating parts of each storm.
'If we can track that sensor with time, we're going to, at least for a couple of these storms, understand the exact path, the exact trajectory that a hailstone takes,' said Victor Gensini, a professor of meteorology at Northern Illinois University and an ICECHIP principal investigator.
In an atmosphere warmed by climate change, 'we get a lot more instability,' Gensini said, which researchers think creates stronger updrafts.
Those stronger updrafts can support larger hailstones for more time, which allows balls or discs of ice to gain mass, before gravity sends them racing to the ground.
'It's kind of like if you take a hair dryer and turn it on its end, it's pretty easy to balance a pingpong ball, right, in that airstream,' Gensini explained. 'But what would you need to balance a softball? You would need a much stronger updraft stream.'
Storm modeling suggests stronger updrafts will increase the frequency of large hail in the future, even as it decreases the likelihood of hail overall. Researchers suspect small hail will decrease because its lower mass means that it will take longer to fall. By the time it's close to the surface, it has often melted down to water.
'There's this kind of dichotomy, right, where you get less small hail but more large hail in these warmer atmospheres that have very strong updrafts,' Gensini said.
During their field campaign, the researchers amassed a collection of more than 10,000 hailstones in chests of dry ice to try to determine if their computer models are getting the dynamics of hail growth right.
'The hail record is kind of messy,' Gensini said of previous data, adding that observers have recorded more 2-, 3- and 4-inch hailstones, but it's not clear if that's because more people are chasing and finding big hail or because the atmosphere is producing more of it.
Gensini said the new measurements will help researchers compare what is happening in the air to what they're finding on the ground, which should improve hail forecasts and mitigate economic losses.
In many of the areas where ICECHIP is working, there's a lot of agriculture, according to Karen Kosiba, an atmospheric scientist with the University of Illinois Flexible Array of Radars and Mesonets team who is also working with ICECHIP.
'It affects their crops, their machinery, getting stuff into shelter,' she said. 'There's a lot of economic ties to the weather.'

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NBC News
2 days ago
- NBC News
Hail chasers: Meet the weather detectives trying to decipher why hail is becoming a bigger problem
The chase From mid-May through the end of June, ICECHIP storm chasers traveled across the Front Range of the Rockies and the central Plains, sometimes riding in vehicles armored against falling ice. They launched drones, released weather balloons and set up mobile doppler radars — all techniques honed by tornado chasers. As one group positioned mobile doppler radars to intercept the storm at close range, other researchers were responsible for releasing weather balloons nearby or setting out sensors to measure the size and velocity of a hail strike. During some storms, researchers released hundreds of pingpong ball-like devices called hailsondes into the tempests' path to track the life cycle of a hail stone — when it is melting and freezing, and how wind dynamics that lift and drop these chunks of ice affect their growth. Convective thunderstorms, with big internal updrafts, generate hail by circulating a mix of water and ice crystals into the freezing layers of the upper atmosphere. Hail typically forms at altitudes of 20,000 to 50,000 feet, where temperatures are between minus 22 degrees and 14 degrees Fahrenheit. Those same updrafts sweep hailsondes into the hail-generating parts of each storm. 'If we can track that sensor with time, we're going to, at least for a couple of these storms, understand the exact path, the exact trajectory that a hailstone takes,' said Victor Gensini, a professor of meteorology at Northern Illinois University and an ICECHIP principal investigator. In an atmosphere warmed by climate change, 'we get a lot more instability,' Gensini said, which researchers think creates stronger updrafts. Those stronger updrafts can support larger hailstones for more time, which allows balls or discs of ice to gain mass, before gravity sends them racing to the ground. 'It's kind of like if you take a hair dryer and turn it on its end, it's pretty easy to balance a pingpong ball, right, in that airstream,' Gensini explained. 'But what would you need to balance a softball? You would need a much stronger updraft stream.' Storm modeling suggests stronger updrafts will increase the frequency of large hail in the future, even as it decreases the likelihood of hail overall. Researchers suspect small hail will decrease because its lower mass means that it will take longer to fall. By the time it's close to the surface, it has often melted down to water. 'There's this kind of dichotomy, right, where you get less small hail but more large hail in these warmer atmospheres that have very strong updrafts,' Gensini said. During their field campaign, the researchers amassed a collection of more than 10,000 hailstones in chests of dry ice to try to determine if their computer models are getting the dynamics of hail growth right. 'The hail record is kind of messy,' Gensini said of previous data, adding that observers have recorded more 2-, 3- and 4-inch hailstones, but it's not clear if that's because more people are chasing and finding big hail or because the atmosphere is producing more of it. Gensini said the new measurements will help researchers compare what is happening in the air to what they're finding on the ground, which should improve hail forecasts and mitigate economic losses. In many of the areas where ICECHIP is working, there's a lot of agriculture, according to Karen Kosiba, an atmospheric scientist with the University of Illinois Flexible Array of Radars and Mesonets team who is also working with ICECHIP. 'It affects their crops, their machinery, getting stuff into shelter,' she said. 'There's a lot of economic ties to the weather.'


The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
Storm Tracker: Hurricane forecasters watch disturbance in Atlantic
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NBC News
10-07-2025
- NBC News
U.S. rocked by four 1-in-1,000-year storms in less than a week
First the river rose in Texas. Then, the rains fell hard over North Carolina, New Mexico and Illinois. In less than a week, there were at least four 1-in-1,000-year rainfall events across the United States — intense deluges that are thought to have roughly a 0.1% chance of happening in any given year. 'Any one of these intense rainfall events has a low chance of occurring in a given year,' said Kristina Dahl, vice president for science at the nonprofit organization Climate Central, 'so to see events that are historic and record-breaking in multiple parts of the country over the course of one week is even more alarming.' It's the kind of statistic, several experts said, that is both eye-opening and likely to become more common because of climate change. At least 120 people were killed across six counties in central Texas' Hill Country region last week, after heavy rain caused catastrophic flash flooding. The Guadalupe River, near Kerrville, surged more than 20 feet in 90 minutes during the storm, washing away roads and causing widespread devastation. Days later, on Sunday, Tropical Storm Chantal drenched parts of North Carolina. Extensive flooding was reported across the central portion of the state, with some areas receiving nearly 12 inches of rain in only 24 hours. Local officials are still confirming the total number of deaths from the flooding, all while the region is under another flood watch Thursday. In New Mexico on Tuesday, at least three people were killed by devastating flash floods that swept through the remote mountain village of Ruidoso, about 180 miles south of Albuquerque. And in Chicago that same day, 5 inches of rain fell in only 90 minutes over Garfield Park, prompting multiple rescues on the west side of the city. Experts said that while 1-in-1,000-year floods are statistically rare, a certain number do occur every year in the United States. 'The probability is 0.1% for your location each year, so it's very unlikely to occur where you are, but over an entire country, some of them are going to happen somewhere each year,' said Russ Schumacher, director of the Colorado Climate Center at Colorado State University and the state climatologist. Climate change is also likely to make these kinds of extreme flooding events more common, he said. It's often tricky to untangle the precise influence that climate change had on individual weather events, but scientists agree that severe storms are more likely in a warming world — along with more intense rainfall. 'This is one of the areas where attribution science is more solid, because the underlying physics is relatively simple,' Schumacher said. A warmer atmosphere can hold more water, making storms capable of dumping huge amounts of rain over land. Studies have shown that for every degree Fahrenheit that the planet heats up, the atmosphere can hold around 3% to 4% more moisture. 'It is a mathematical certainty that as the atmosphere holds more water, it can also discharge more water in an instantaneous fashion,' said Dave Gochis, a hydrometeorologist who is the head of prediction services at Airborne Snow Observatories, a company headquartered in Mammoth Lakes, California, that measures and models snow and water resources around the world. But terrain can also be a major factor during heavy rainfall events, Gochis said. In Texas, for instance, the area's hills and canyons make it susceptible to flash flooding. Thin soil on top of a layer of bedrock also limits how much water can be absorbed in the ground, Gochis said. In New Mexico, the village of Ruidoso was ravaged by wildfires last year, which left burn scars that tend to increase runoff and heighten the risks of flash flooding. The events of the past week have laid bare the devastating effects of climate change on extreme weather — and the need to protect communities both before and after these events occur, said Dahl of Climate Central. Recovery efforts may take years, she said, and other consequences, including to public health, may linger for much longer. 'These events come and go in the news, and before you know it, we're on to the next one,' Dahl said. 'It's easy to forget that for the people experiencing this, it's really a yearslong process of healing.'