Abstract
We study the sources of intense ultra-high-frequency (UHF) radiation (in the frequency range 1-6GHz) arising during the development of high-voltage atmospheric discharges. The discharges were initiated in a long discharge gap by applying an approximately 1-MV pulse with positive or negative polarity. By employing a radio registration system based on ultrawideband antennas, we managed to localize the UHF radiation sources in the discharge with centimeter accuracy and investigate their temporal and spatial correlation with the discharge structures. The vast majority of the localized sources turned out to be concentrated in the near-electrode regions. It is found that the generation mechanism of intense UHF radiation in a laboratory discharge cannot be unambiguously associated with such basic processes as the head-on collision of opposite-polarity streamers or the interaction of single streamers with the near-electrode plasma at the surface of metal electrodes. We discovered that the observed UHF emission appears basically as a precursor of the intense plasma development in a certain discharge region, whereinto a bright counterstreamer comes a bit later. The findings were confirmed by the statistical observations and results of imaging the dynamics of the discharge structures with a nanosecond temporal resolution.
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