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18 comments
  • looks a bit like convective cells to me! they happen in summer (as long as there is sufficient surface heating to drive the convection) - they're like bubbles in boiling water.

    It looks like you've got high pressure over there though... the high pressure may just limit the cloud heights and intensity of the precipitation?

    Edit: these look a little too big to be pop-up cells, but they still look more convective (instead of frontal). a bit suspiciously too round, though. Do they stay consistent and track across the sky, or are they more bubble-like?

    2nd edit: looks like I'm wrong and it is a radar artefact :) (this is why looking at radar timelapses is more important than just single-frames!)

    3rd edit: it's not an artefact, it's a real signal! it's insects!

  • I don’t know my German geography, but I’d be curious how topology plays into this.

    • Doesn't look like orographic cloud to me! Usually they have ripples in em

      Plus, the Alps are only really in the South and nowhere near Berlin (which is pretty flat) - so you'd see more enhancement in the South than the North, whereas these are pretty evenly spaced

18 comments