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Journal ArticleDOI

Television image of a large upward electrical discharge above a thunderstorm system.

R. C. Franz, +2 more
- 06 Jul 1990 - 
- Vol. 249, Iss: 4964, pp 48-51
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TLDR
An image of an unusual luminous electrical discharge over a thunderstorm 250 kilometers from the observing site has been obtained with a low-light-level television camera and resembled two jets or fountains and was probably caused by two localizd electric charge concentrations at the cloud tops.
Abstract
An image of an unusual luminous electrical discharge over a thunderstorm 250 kilometers from the observing site has been obtained with a low-light-level television camera. The discharge began at the cloud tops at 14 kilometers and extended into the clear air 20 kilometers higher. The image, which had a duration of less than 30 milliseconds,resembled two jets or fountains and was probably caused by two localizd electric charge concentrations at the cloud tops. Large upward discharges may create a hazard for aircraft and rocket launches and, by penetrating into the ionosphere, may initiate whistler waves and other effects on a magnetospheric scale. Such upward electrical discharges may account for unexplained photometric observations of distant lightning events that showed a low rise rate of the luminous pulse and no electromagnetic sferic pulse of the type that accompanies cloud-to-earth lightning strokes. An unusually high rate of such photometric events was recorded during the night of 22 to 23 September 1989 during a storm associated with hurricane Hugo.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Discovery of Intense Gamma-Ray Flashes of Atmospheric Origin

TL;DR: Detectors aboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory have observed an unexplained terrestrial phenomenon: brief, intense flashes of gamma rays that must originate in the atmosphere at altitudes above at least 30 kilometers in order to escape atmospheric absorption and reach the orbiting detectors.
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Preliminary results from the Sprites94 Aircraft Campaign: 1. Red sprites

TL;DR: The dual jet aircraft Sprites94 campaign yielded the first color imagery and unambiguously triangulated physical dimensions and heights of upper atmospheric optical emissions associated with thunderstorm systems as mentioned in this paper.
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Sprites produced by quasi-electrostatic heating and ionization in the lower ionosphere

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the optical emission levels are predominantly defined by the lightning discharge duration and the conductivity properties of the atmosphere/lower ionosphere (i.e., relaxation time of electric field in the conducting medium).
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The physics of lightning

TL;DR: A review of the physics of lightning can be found in this article, with the goal of providing interested researchers a useful resource for starting work in this fascinating field, and the recent discoveries of intense bursts of X-rays and gamma-rays associated with thunderstorms and lightning illustrate that new and interesting physics is still being discovered in our atmosphere.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sprites, ELF Transients, and Positive Ground Strokes.

TL;DR: In two summertime mesoscale convective systems, mesospheric optical sprite phenomena were often coincident with both large-amplitude positive cloud-to-ground lightning and transient Schumann resonance excitations of the entire Earth-ionosphere cavity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The electric field of a thundercloud and some of its effects

C T R Wilson
TL;DR: In this paper, the potential difference between the poles of a thundercloud may reach values of the order of a million kilovolts, and the resulting ionization near the ground may be large.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progressive Lightning. VI

TL;DR: In this paper, a general picture of the nature of the discharge and the manner of its development was derived from 41 photographs comprising 95 separate flashes and over 200 lightning strokes from 13 different thunderstorms over a period of three years and may therefore be considered to offer a fair sample of the lightning discharges of Southern Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seawater strontium isotopic variations from 2.5 million years ago to the present.

TL;DR: Measurements of marine carbonate samples indicate that during the past 2.5 million years the 87Sr/86Sr ratio of seawater has increased by 14 x 10-5.5%, indicating that continental weathering rates were exceptionally high.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subionospheric VLF signatures of nighttime D region perturbations in the vicinity of lightning discharges

TL;DR: A 12-hour sequence of perturbations of subionospheric VLF signals observed in association with lightning provided preliminary evidence that the ionospheric regions perturbed in these events may be confined to within ∼150 km of the lightning discharges, and that intracloud flashes as well as cloud-to-ground lightning may be important in producing the perturbation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical measurements in the atmosphere and the ionosphere over an active thunderstorm: 2. Direct current electric fields and conductivity

TL;DR: In this article, a series of three rockets was launched over an air mass thunderstorm off the eastern seaboard of Virginia while simultaneous stratospheric and ground-based electric field measurements were made.
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