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Effects of charge and electrostatic potential on lightning propagation

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TLDR
In this article, three-dimensional lightning mapping observations are compared to cloud charge structures and electric potential profiles inferred from balloon soundings of electric field in New Mexico mountain thunderstorms, and the comparisons consistently show good agreement between the altitudes of horizontal lightning channels and the altitude of electric potential extrema or wells.
Abstract
[1] Three-dimensional lightning mapping observations are compared to cloud charge structures and electric potential profiles inferred from balloon soundings of electric field in New Mexico mountain thunderstorms. For six individual intracloud and cloud-to-ground flashes and for a sequence of 36 flashes in one storm, the comparisons consistently show good agreement between the altitudes of horizontal lightning channels and the altitudes of electric potential extrema or wells. Lightning flashes appear to deposit charge of opposite polarity in relatively localized volumes within the preexisting lower positive, midlevel negative, and upper positive charge regions associated with the potential wells. The net effect of recurring lightning charge deposition at the approximate levels of potential extrema is to increase the complexity in the observed storm charge structure. The midlevel breakdown of both normal intracloud flashes and negative cloud-to-ground flashes is observed to be segregated by flash type into the upper and lower parts of the deep potential well associated with the midlevel negative charge. The segregation is consistent with perturbations observed in the bottom of the negative potential well due to embedded positive charge that was probably deposited by earlier flashes. It is also consistent with an expected tendency for vertical breakdown to begin branching horizontally before reaching the local potential minimum. The joint observations reconcile the apparent dichotomy between the complex charge structures often inferred from balloon soundings through storms and the simpler structures often inferred from lightning measurements.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Simulated Electrification of a Small Thunderstorm with Two-Moment Bulk Microphysics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors simulated a small continental multicell storm and observed that the first six observed lightning flashes were all negative cloud-to-ground (CG) flashes, after which intracloud (IC) flashes also occurred between middle and upper levels of the storm.
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The 29 June 2000 Supercell Observed during STEPS. Part II: Lightning and Charge Structure

TL;DR: The second part of a two-part study examines the lightning and charge structure evolution of the 29 June 2000 tornadic supercell observed during the Severe Thunderstorm Electrification and Precipitation Study (STEPS) as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Severe Thunderstorm Electrification and Precipitation Study

TL;DR: The STEPS project as discussed by the authors aimed to achieve a better understanding of the interactions between kinematics, precipitation, and electrification in severe thunderstorms by using a multiple-Doppler polarimetric radar network and a time-of-arrival very high frequency (VHF) lig...
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Upward electrical discharges from thunderstorms

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of observational and modeling results are presented that indicate two principal ways in which upward discharges can be produced. But the cause and nature of these discharges remain a mystery.
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TELEX The Thunderstorm Electrification and Lightning Experiment

TL;DR: In this article, measurements during TELEX by a lightning mapping array, polarimetric and mobile Doppler radars, and balloon-borne electric field meters and radiosondes showed how lightning and other electrical properties depend on storm structure, updrafts, and precipitation formation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

New Equations for Computing Vapor Pressure and Enhancement Factor

TL;DR: In this paper, the saturation vapor pressure and temperature for moist air were derived for the meteorologically interesting region of −80 to +50°C. The equations are designed to be easily implemented on a calculator or computer and can be used to convert in either direction.
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Summary and Discussion

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- 01 Dec 1973 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

A Combined TOA/MDF Technology Upgrade of the U.S. National Lightning Detection Network

TL;DR: The U.S. National Lightning Detection Network (NLDN) has provided real-time and historical lightning data to the electric utility industry, the National Weather Service, and other government and commercial users.
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A GPS‐based three‐dimensional lightning mapping system: Initial observations in central New Mexico

TL;DR: In this article, a GPS-based system has been developed that accurately locates the sources of VHF radiation from lightning discharges in three spatial dimensions and time, and the observations are found to reflect the basic charge structure of electrified storms.
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