Abstract

The Global atmospheric Electric Circuit (GEC) sustains the fair weather (FW) electric field, or potential gradient (PG). In this article, we analyze PG measurements recorded between 2017 and 2021 at the Instituto de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas para la Defensa (CITEDEF) in Buenos Aires, Argentina, to calculate the daily PG (FW) curve and examine whether local PG measurements capture the GEC signal. With the aim of supporting future common methodologies that do not rely on meteorological data for FW identification - and hence aid inter-comparisons, we rely on previously developed statistical methodologies to propose a FW selection based on the absolute deviation from the median of the data series. Using this methodology we filtered FW days and showed that the local PG (FW) curve had a significant correlation of 0.83 with the Carnegie curve. In order to test the extent to which the local daily PG (FW) curve captures the global thunderstorm signal, the area of thunderstorms was calculated at both global and regional scales using data from the Thunder Hour Database (http://thunderhours.earthnetworks.com). The PG (FW) curve was shown to have a good correlation with the daily median variation of the global thunderstorm area on both annual and quarterly scales. Additionally, the analysis of coincident aerosol optical thickness (AOD) measurements by the AERONET network and temperature observations helped to conclude that local effects such as pollution from a near highway are not dominating the PG (FW) curve behaviour. Both analyses allowed us to conclude that the GEC signal can be detected in Buenos Aires.

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