Characteristics of cloud-to-ground lightning (CG) and differences between +CG and −CG strokes in China regarding the China National Lightning Detection Network
-
Published:2023-12-04
Issue:12
Volume:23
Page:3747-3759
-
ISSN:1684-9981
-
Container-title:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Jiang Ruijiao,Zhang Guoping,Wang Shudong,Xue Bing,Xie Zhengshuai,Yu Tingzhao,Wang Kuoyin,Ding Jin,Zhu Xiaoxiang
Abstract
Abstract. A lightning location system consisting of multiple ground-based stations is an effective means of lightning observation. The dataset from CNLDN (China National Lightning Detection Network) in 2016–2022 is employed to analyze the temporal and spatial lightning distributions and the differences between +CG (positive cloud-to-ground lightning) and −CG (negative cloud-to-ground lightning) strokes in China. On the annual scale, lightning activity is most prevalent during the summer months (June, July, and August), accounting for 72.6 % of the year. Spring sees more lightning than autumn, and winter has only a small amount in southeastern coastal areas. During the day, the frequency of lightning peaks at 15:00–17:00 CST (China standard time) and is lowest at 8:00–10:00 CST. For the period with high CG stroke frequency (summer of a year or afternoon of a day), the proportion of +CG strokes and the discharge peak current are relatively small. Winter in a year and morning or midnight in a day correspond to a greater +CG stroke proportion and discharge current. Spatially, low latitudes, undulating terrain, the seaside, and humid surfaces are favorable factors for lightning occurrence. Thus, the southeast coastland has the largest lightning stroke density, while the northwest deserts and basins and the western and northern Tibetan Plateau, with altitudes over 6000 m, have almost no lightning. The proportion of +CG strokes and the peak current are low in the southern region with high density but diverse in other regions. The Tibetan Plateau causes the diversity of lightning activity in China and lays the foundation for studying the impact of surface elevation on lightning. Results indicate that the +CG stroke proportion on the eastern and southern Tibetan Plateau is up to 15 %, larger than the plain regions. The peak current of −CG strokes is positively correlated with altitude, but +CG strokes show a negative correlation, resulting in a large difference in peak current between +CG and −CG on the plain and a small difference on the plateau.
Funder
Key Technologies Research and Development Program
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference30 articles.
1. Carey, L. D. and Buffalo, K. M.: Environmental control of cloud-to-ground lightning polarity in severe storms, Mon. Weather Rev., 135, 1327—1353, 2007. 2. Cummins, K. L., Murphy, M. J., Bardo, E. A., Hiscox, W. L., Pyle, R. B., and Pifer, A. E.: A combined TOA/MDF technology upgrade of the US National Lightning Detection Network, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 103, 9035–9044, 1998. 3. Diendorfer, G.: Some comments on the achievable accuracy of local ground flash density values, in: International Lightning Detection Conference, June 2008, Uppsala, Sweden, 2008. 4. Feng, M. X., Zhou, Y., Yu, M., and Zhang, Y. H.: Evaluation of Jiangsu ADTD Lightning Location System Data in 2013, Sci. Technol. Eng, 15, 7984, 2015. 5. Holle, R. L. and Cummins, K. L.: Monthly distributions of US NLDN cloud-to-ground lightning, in: 3rd International Lightning Meteorology Conference, April 2010, Orlando, FL, USA, 21–22, 2010.
|
|