EGU21-10406, updated on 27 Sep 2021 https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10406 EGU General Assembly 2021 © Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

An approach to Storm Filomena severe snowfall and precipitation in : preliminary results

Alejandro Rodríguez-Sánchez1, Roberto Granda-Maestre2, Carlos Calvo-Sancho3, and Álvaro Oliver-García4 1CIEMAT, Departamento de Medio Ambiente, , Spain ([email protected]) 2Independent, Horche, Spain ([email protected]) 3University of , Department of Geography, Zaragoza, Spain ([email protected]) 4University of Alcala, Department of Geology, Geography and Enviroment, Madrid, Spain ([email protected])

Between 7-10 January 2020, severe snowfall and precipitation event swept over south, center and eastern Spain, with a total amount of precipitation of more than 200 mm on the south, snowfall accumulations of 50 cm or more on widespread areas of center Spain and 25 cm on Zaragoza and Ebro valley.

The low, called Filomena, was an unusual event with excessive social impact. In this study we will present the synoptic framework, characterized by the presence of three different air masses: cold air mass on low levels, more humid Mediterranean air mass on low-mid levels, at around 2-3 kilometres from surface; and a wet and warm subtropical air mass from the south. The interaction of these three air masses lead to the exceptional precipitation and accumulations. For this end, ERA-5 reanalysis and satellite images will be used. For mesoscale analysis, WRF-ARW will be used with both GFS and ERA-5 reanalysis. This extreme event, although it was generally predictable, had key points of low predictability in some parts with high social impact, including very populated areas.

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