Abstract

• We measured the electric field waveforms produced by both RTL and NL at comparable far distances using same instrumentation, where the radiation field is dominant. Compared to previous work done by Mallick & Rakov (2014), we increase the sample size of RTL data and compare with NL data. • The majority of the parameters show comparable values. The distributions for 10%-to-90% risetime and HPW show less scatter for RTL than NL. The plateau type slow front occurs in RTL strokes more often than in NL strokes. The initial electric field peak and the various time parameters of field waveforms are very low. • For subsequent strokes in NL and field propagation over land, HPW values are typically of the order of 10 μs. • For 184 subsequent strokes in NL and 139 strokes in RTL, we found that the field zero-crossing time for RTL is slightly smaller than for NL. • The smaller electric field pulse widths that we measured for RTL compared to NL could be due to: 1. A faster current decay with height in RTL return strokes. 2. The bottom part of the channel for RTL is straighter than for NL. Using wideband electric field records obtained at the Lightning Observatory in Gainesville (LOG), Florida, we examined in detail the characteristics of far electric field waveforms produced by two categories of lightning return strokes. The first category includes return strokes of any order in lightning flashes triggered by a rocket extending a grounded wire toward the overhead thundercloud, which we label RTL (rocket-triggered lightning) strokes. The second category includes return strokes of order 2 and higher (that is, only subsequent strokes) in natural cloud-to-ground lightning flashes, which we label NL (natural lightning) strokes. Properties of RTL and NL strokes are expected to be similar. A total of 139 RTL strokes from years 2013 to 2016 and 184 NL strokes from years 2013 to 2015 were examined in this study. All strokes transported negative charge to ground and occurred at similar distances from LOG. Similarities and dissimilarities of waveform parameters for the two categories of strokes and their possible explanations are discussed in this paper. This is the first detailed comparison of electric field waveforms of RTL and NL strokes recorded at approximately the same distance (some tens of kilometers) and with the same instrumentation.

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