Gregor C. Leckebusch

Gregor C. Leckebusch

University of Birmingham

H-index: 37

Europe-United Kingdom

About Gregor C. Leckebusch

Gregor C. Leckebusch, With an exceptional h-index of 37 and a recent h-index of 27 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Birmingham, specializes in the field of Meteorology, Climatology, Uncertainties, Climate Impacts.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Bridging science and practice to en (in) sure sustainable development in a changing climate.

Objective Identification of Tropical Cyclones with Severe Storm Surge Potential for the North-west Pacific

An Investigation into the Role of the Ocean for Seasonal Predictability of European Windstorms

Is the NAO signal-to-noise paradox exacerbated by severe winter windstorms?

Climatological Evaluation of the Mei-yu Front Representation in CMIP6

Understanding winter windstorm predictability over Europe

A comparison of two statistical postprocessing methods for heavy‐precipitation forecasts over India during the summer monsoon

Intra-seasonal variability of temporal clustering of European winter windstorms

Gregor C. Leckebusch Information

University

Position

Professor of Meteorology and Climatology UK

Citations(all)

6771

Citations(since 2020)

2503

Cited By

5362

hIndex(all)

37

hIndex(since 2020)

27

i10Index(all)

61

i10Index(since 2020)

53

Email

University Profile Page

University of Birmingham

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Gregor C. Leckebusch Skills & Research Interests

Meteorology

Climatology

Uncertainties

Climate Impacts

Top articles of Gregor C. Leckebusch

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Bridging science and practice to en (in) sure sustainable development in a changing climate.

Journal of Catastrophe Risk and Resilience

Gregor Leckebusch

2024/2/6

Objective Identification of Tropical Cyclones with Severe Storm Surge Potential for the North-west Pacific

Xiaoqi Zhang

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kelvin S Ng

2024/3/7

An Investigation into the Role of the Ocean for Seasonal Predictability of European Windstorms

Kelvin S Ng

Gregor C Leckebusch

2024/3/7

Is the NAO signal-to-noise paradox exacerbated by severe winter windstorms?

Lisa Degenhardt

Gregor C Leckebusch

Adam A Scaife

Doug Smith

Steve Hardiman

2024/3/7

Climatological Evaluation of the Mei-yu Front Representation in CMIP6

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kelvin S Ng

Kevin I Hodges

2024/3/7

Understanding winter windstorm predictability over Europe

Weather and Climate Dynamics Discussions

Lisa Degenhardt

Gregor C Leckebusch

Adam A Scaife

2023/6/1

A comparison of two statistical postprocessing methods for heavy‐precipitation forecasts over India during the summer monsoon

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society

Michael Angus

Martin Widmann

Andrew Orr

Raghavendra Ashrit

Gregor C Leckebusch

...

2024/3/6

Intra-seasonal variability of temporal clustering of European winter windstorms

Sophie Feltz

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kelvin S Ng

Tim Kruschke

2024/3/7

Understanding the Potential Changes in Causal-Physical Drivers of Extreme Mei-yu Precipitation and Potential Applications

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Kelvin S Ng

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kevin I Hodges

2023/5

Understanding and assessing seasonal forecast skill of severe winter windstorm over Europe with large-scale patterns and dynamical factors

Lisa Degenhardt

Gregor C Leckebusch

Adam A Scaife

2023

Large-scale circulation patterns and their influence on European winter windstorm predictions

Climate Dynamics

Lisa Degenhardt

Gregor C Leckebusch

Adam A Scaife

2023/6

Towards a Robust Hazard Assessment for the Current and a Changing Climate

Gregor Leckebusch

Kelvin Ng

Michael Walz

Michael Angus

Gavkhar Mamadjanova

2023

Assessing the influence of dynamical factors on seasonal skill of severe winter windstorm predictions

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Lisa Degenhardt

Gregor C Leckebusch

Adam A Scaife

2023/5

Application of Machine Learning in Predicting Current and Future Climate Extremes in China

Kelvin Ng

Gregor Leckebusch

Kevin Hodges

2023

Objective Tracking of Tropical Cyclones and their Impact on Relevant Wind Fields in the West-Pacific for Construction of Physically Consistent Event Sets

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Xiaoqi Zhang

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kelvin S Ng

2023/5

Seasonal predictability of extreme cyclones and storms

Gregor Leckebusch

Kelvin Ng

Lisa Degenhardt

Adam Scaife

2023

Assessing the boundaries of seasonal forecast skill for European winter storms from different hindcast suites

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Gregor C Leckebusch

Lisa Degenhardt

Elleanor Berrie

Kelvin S Ng

Elisa Spreitzer

2023/5

A Causality-guided Approach for Predicting Future Changes in Extreme Rainfall over China Using Known Large-scale Modes

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Kelvin S Ng

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kevin Hodges

2022/5

Modelling Extreme Mei-yu Rainfall Over China Using Causal-Physical Drivers

AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts

Kelvin Ng

Gregor C Leckebusch

Kevin Hodges

2022/12

Dynamical forcing factors of severe windstorms: their seasonal forecast skill and influence on seasonal windstorm predictions

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Lisa Degenhardt

Adam Scaife

Gregor Leckebusch

2022/5

See List of Professors in Gregor C. Leckebusch University(University of Birmingham)

Co-Authors

H-index: 63
Joaquim G. Pinto

Joaquim G. Pinto

Karlsruher Institut für Technologie

H-index: 62
Peter Knippertz

Peter Knippertz

Karlsruher Institut für Technologie

H-index: 52
PIERO LIONELLO

PIERO LIONELLO

Università del Salento

H-index: 49
Raible CC

Raible CC

Universität Bern

H-index: 38
Thornes JE

Thornes JE

University of Birmingham

H-index: 36
Mary H. Hayden

Mary H. Hayden

University of Colorado Colorado Springs

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