Channel Development and Electric Parameter Characteristics of Regular Pulse Bursts in Lightning

Author:

Fan X.123ORCID,Zhang Y.45ORCID,Krehbiel P.3ORCID,Zheng D.2ORCID,Yao W.2,Zhang Y.2ORCID,Xu L.2ORCID,Liu H.2ORCID,Lyu W.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plateau Atmospheric Physics Northwest Institute of Eco‐Environment and Resources Chinese Academy of Sciences Lanzhou China

2. State Key Laboratory of Severe Weather Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences Beijing China

3. Langmuir Laboratory for Atmospheric Research Geophysical Research Center New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Socorro NM USA

4. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Institute of Atmospheric Sciences Shanghai China

5. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Ocean‐Land‐Atmosphere Boundary Dynamics and Climate Change Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractObservations of a regular pulse burst (RPB) at the end of a K‐event are analyzed utilizing a simple geometric model and particle swarm optimization (PSO) to estimate the currents and propagation speeds of successive pulses of the RPB. The results show that the current of successive pulses is strongly overlapped and, for typical speeds of continuously propagating K‐events, are unphysically large (88 kA), exceeding the currents of most strokes to ground. By default, the unphysical nature of the result, coupled with very high frequency interferometer observations of an RPB in Florida, shows that the propagation speed of the pulses is significantly faster than expected, namely ∼0.6–1.8 × 108 m/s. This reduces the inferred current from 88 kA down to 6–18 kA, typical of intracloud events. The fast propagation speed of the stepping is explained by successive pulses retracing much of the path of the preceding pulses due to the successive pulses being strongly overlapped.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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