The evolution and structure of extreme optical lightning flashes
This study documents the composition, morphology, and motion of extreme optical lightning flashes observed by the Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS). The furthest separation of LIS events (groups) in any flash is 135 km (89 km), the flash with the largest footprint had an illuminated area of 10,604 km(2), and the most dendritic flash has 234 visible branches. The longest-duration convective LIS flash lasted 28s and is overgrouped and not physical. The longest-duration convective-to-stratiform propagating flash lasted 7.4s, while the longest-duration entirely stratiform flash lasted 4.3s. The longest series of nearly consecutive groups in time lasted 242 ms. The most radiant recorded LIS group (i.e., superbolt) is 735 times more radiant than the average group. Factors that impact these optical measures of flash morphology and evolution are discussed. While it is apparent that LIS can record the horizontal development of the lightning channel in some cases, radiative transfer within the cloud limits the flash extent and level of detail measured from orbit. These analyses nonetheless suggest that lightning imagers such as LIS and Geostationary Lightning Mapper can complement ground-based lightning locating systems for studying physical lightning phenomena across large geospatial domains.
document
http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7v69n6x
eng
geoscientificInformation
Text
publication
2016-01-01T00:00:00Z
publication
2017-12-27T00:00:00Z
Copyright 2017 American Geophysical Union.
None
OpenSky Support
UCAR/NCAR - Library
PO Box 3000
Boulder
80307-3000
name: homepage
pointOfContact
OpenSky Support
UCAR/NCAR - Library
PO Box 3000
Boulder
80307-3000
name: homepage
pointOfContact
2023-08-18T19:17:12.635239