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Characteristics of a rocket‐triggered lightning flash with large stroke number and the associated leader propagation
Author(s) -
Sun Zhuling,
Qie Xiushu,
Jiang Rubin,
Liu Mingyuan,
Wu Xueke,
Wang Zhichao,
Lu Gaopeng,
Zhang Hongbo
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/2014jd022100
Subject(s) - lightning (connector) , rocket (weapon) , flash (photography) , dart , electric field , waveform , physics , peak current , meteorology , electrical engineering , geology , mechanics , optics , aerospace engineering , computer science , voltage , engineering , power (physics) , electrode , quantum mechanics , electrochemistry , programming language
A negative lightning flash with 16 leader‐return stroke sequences, triggered in the summer of 2013 using the classical rocket‐and‐wire triggering technique, was examined with simultaneous two‐dimensional (2D) imaging of very high‐frequency (VHF) radiation sources, channel‐base current measurement, broadband electric field waveforms and high‐speed video images. A total of 28.0 C negative charge was transferred to ground during the whole flash, and the charge transferred during the initial stage was 4.9 C, which is the weakest among the triggered lightning flashes at the SHandong Artificially Triggering Lightning Experiment (SHATLE). The peak current of 16 return strokes ranged from 5.8 to 32.5 kA with a geometric mean of 14.1 kA. The progression of upward positive leader and downward negative (dart or dart‐stepped) leaders was reproduced visually by using an improved short‐baseline VHF lightning location system with continuous data recording capability. The upward positive leader was mapped immediately from the tip of the metal wire during the initial stage, developing at a speed of about 10 4  m/s without branches. The upward positive leader and all the 14 negative leaders captured by the 2D imaging system propagated along the same channel with few branches inside the cloud, which might be the reason for the relatively small charge transfer. The 2D imaging results also show that dart leaders may transform into dart‐stepped leaders after a long time interval between successive strokes.

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