Publication: Statistical patterns in the location of natural lightning
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Zoghzoghy, F. G.
Cohen, M. B.
Said, R. K.
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English
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Abstract
Lightning discharges are nature’s way of neutralizing the electrical buildup in thunderclouds. Thus, if an individual discharge destroys a substantial fraction of the cloud charge, the probability of a subsequent ?ash is reduced until the cloud charge separation rebuilds. The temporal pattern of lightning activity in a localized region may thus inherently be a proxy measure of the corresponding timescales for charge separation and electric field buildup processes. We present a statistical technique to bring out this effect (as well as the subsequent recovery) using lightning geo-location data, in this case with data from the National Lightning Detection Network (NLDN) and from the GLD360 Network. We use this statistical method to show that a lightning ?ash can remove an appreciable fraction of the built up charge, affecting the neighboring lightning activity for tens of seconds within a 10 km radius. We find that our results correlate with timescales of electric field buildup in storms and suggest that the proposed statistical tool could be used to study the electrification of storms on a global scale. We ?nd that this ?ash suppression effect is a strong function of ?ash type, ?ash polarity, cloud-to-ground ?ash multiplicity, the geographic location of lightning, and is proportional to NLDN model-derived peak stroke current. We characterize the spatial and temporal extent of the suppression effect as a function of these parameters and discuss various applications of our findings.
Source:
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Publisher:
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
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Subject
Electrical and electronic engineering