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Book ChapterDOI

Schumann resonance signatures of global lightning activity

TLDR
In this paper, the Earth's Schumann resonances (SR) and their application to understanding global lightning are discussed, and the relationship between the variation of SR intensity and global lightning activity is shown.
Abstract
This chapter is concerned with the Earth’s Schumann resonances (SR) and their application to understanding global lightning. The natural electromagnetic waves in the SR frequency range (5 Hz to approx. 60 Hz) radiated by lightning discharges are contained by the Earth-ionosphere cavity. This cavity excitation by lightning can occur as a single energetic flash (a ‘Q-burst’), or as an integration of a large number of less energetic flashes (the ‘background’ resonances). In principle, continuous observations of SR parameters (modal amplitudes, frequencies, and quality factors) provide invaluable information for monitoring the worldwide lightning activity from a single SR station. Relationships between the variation of SR intensity and global lightning activity are shown. Connections between the change of diurnal modal SR frequency range and the areal variation of worldwide lightning are demonstrated. The temporal variation of the diurnal SR frequency patterns characteristic of the global lightning dynamics is also presented. Distortions of ELF waves propagating between the lightning sources and the observer are theoretically discussed based on the TDTE (two-dimensional telegraph equation) technique, focusing on the role of the day-night asymmetry of the Earth-ionosphere cavity. Theoretical and observational results are compared. Both instruments for SR observations and spectral methods for deducing SR parameters are reviewed. Experimental findings by SR on global lightning variations on different time scales (diurnal, seasonal, intraseasonal, annual, semiannual, interannual, 5-day, long-term) are summarized. The growing use of SR measurements as a natural diagnostic for global climate change is emphasized.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The global electrical circuit: A review

TL;DR: In this paper, the diurnal variation of the global circuit, surface measurements of electric field at high latitude, the annual variation, the semiannual variation, role of lightning as a source for the global circuits, the electrical contribution of mesoscale convective systems, the possible effect of thunderstorms on the E and F regions of the ionosphere, evidence for a global circuit impact from nuclear weapons tests, the controversy over long-term variations, the response to climate change, and finally the impact of global circuit on climate
Journal ArticleDOI

Variability of global lightning activity on the ENSO time scale

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied global lightning activity on the ENSO (El Nino Southern Oscillation) time scale based on recordings of the Earth's Schumann resonances at Nagycenk (NCK), Hungary as well as observations from the OTD (Optical Transient Detector) and the LIS (Lightning Imaging Sensor) satellites in space.
Journal ArticleDOI

ELF Electromagnetic Waves from Lightning: The Schumann Resonances

TL;DR: In the extremely low frequency (ELF) range below 100 Hz, the global Schumann Resonance (SR) are excited at frequencies of 8 Hz, 14 Hz, 20 Hz, etc as mentioned in this paper.
Book ChapterDOI

Thunderstorms, Lightning and Climate Change

TL;DR: The distribution of lightning around the planet is directly linked to the Earth's climate, which is driven by solar insolation as mentioned in this paper, and due to projections of a warmer climate in the future, one of the key questions related to the impact of future global warming on lightning, thunderstorms, and other severe weather.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lightning and middle atmospheric discharges in the atmosphere

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of solar activity, convective available potential energy, surface temperature and difference of land-ocean surfaces on convection process are discussed different processes of discharge initiation are discussed Events like sprites and halos are caused by the upward quasi-electrostatic fields associated with intense cloud-to-ground discharges.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal variations in global sea level pressure and the total mass of the atmosphere

TL;DR: In this paper, the annual cycles of sea level and surface pressures and the atmospheric pressure owing to water vapor have been analyzed in detail, and the distribution of pressure and mass as a function of latitude are also presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Further Evidence of Global-Scale 5-Day Pressure Waves

TL;DR: In this paper, a cross spectra between long time series (5-10 years) of pressure data from 27 stations and that from Canton Island show peaks in the coherence squares near 5-day periods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of charge transfer in sprite-producing lightning using ELF radio atmospherics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantitatively interpret magnetic field waveforms of ELF radio atmospherics originating in midwestern U.S. lightning discharges and observed at Stanford (∼1800 km range) to determine the temporal variation of the lightning current and thereby measure the charge transfer during stroke.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical measurements over thunderstorms

TL;DR: In this article, the air conductivity and the vertical electric field were measured over thunderstorms from a high-altitude U-2 airplane during the summer of 1986, and the results indicated that the relative efficiency of a thunderstorm to supply current to the global electric circuit has an inverse relationship to the strength of the cloud electrical generator.
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