Abstract

Abstract. The lightning stroke called a "Narrow Bipolar Event", or NBE, is an intracloud discharge responsible for significant charge redistribution. The NBE occurs within 10–20 μs, and some associated process emits irregular bursts of intense radio noise, fading at shorter timescales, sporadically during the charge transfer. In previous reports, the NBE has been inferred to be quite different from other forms of lightning strokes, in two ways: First, the NBE has been inferred to be relatively dark (non-luminous) compared to other lightning strokes. Second, the NBE has been inferred to be isolated within the storm, usually not participating in flashes, but when it is in a flash, the NBE has been inferred to be the flash initiator. These two inferences have sufficiently stark implications for NBE physics that they should be subjected to further independent test, with improved statistics. We attempt such a test with both optical and radio data from the FORTE satellite, and with lightning-stroke data from the Los Alamos Sferic Array. We show rigorously that by the metric of triggering the PDD optical photometer aboard the FORTE satellite, NBE discharges are indeed less luminous than ordinary lightning. Referred to an effective isotropic emitter at the cloud top, NBE light output is inferred to be less than ~3 × 108 W. To address isolation of NBEs, we first expand the pool of geolocated intracloud radio recordings, by borrowing geolocations from either the same flash's or the same storm's other recordings. In this manner we generate a pool of ~2 × 105 unique and independent FORTE intracloud radio recordings, whose slant range from the satellite can be inferred. We then use this slant range to calculate the Effective Radiated Power (ERP) at the radio source, in the passband 26–49 MHz. Stratifying the radio recordings by ERP into eight bins, from a lowest bin (<5 kW) to a highest bin (>140 kW), we document a trend for the radio recordings to become more isolated in time as the ERP increases. The highest ERP bin corresponds to the intracloud emissions associated with NBEs. At the highest ERP, the only significant probability of temporal neighbors is during times following the high-ERP events. In other words, when participating in a flash, the high-ERP emissions occur at the apparent flash initiation.

Highlights

  • The name “Narrow Bipolar Event” refers to a particular, perhaps distinctive Very Low Frequency (VLF; 3–30 kHz) and Low Frequency (LF; 30–300 kHz) signal radiated by intracloud lightning

  • In the remainder of this report, we focus exclusively on intracloud discharges recognized by their VHF transionospheric pulse pairs (TIPPs) structure

  • We find that for TIPPs concurrent with sferics, the distribution rises with increasing VHF Effective Radiated Power (ERP), while for TIPPs concurrent with optical, the distribution falls monotonically versus ERP, reaching a statistically negligible level at the highest ERP

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Summary

Background

The name “Narrow Bipolar Event” refers to a particular, perhaps distinctive Very Low Frequency (VLF; 3–30 kHz) and Low Frequency (LF; 30–300 kHz) signal radiated by intracloud lightning. Very soon after the Blackbeard satellite reports, a collaboration of Langmuir Laboratory for Atmospheric Research and Los Alamos National Laboratory discovered an innovative way to determine the height of the NBE source from the sferic waveform (Smith, 1998; Smith et al, 1999) They used a capacitive antenna originally developed by M. At about the same time as the Langmuir/Los Alamos collaboration on the NBE sferic echoes, the FORTE satellite (launched in 1997) was providing triggered recordings of lightning VHF emissions (Jacobson et al, 1999), including, but not limited to, the intense VHF associated with NBEs. FORTE’s principal radio-receiver trigger system was based on multi-channel coincidence. Testing this further will be a major goal of the present report

Goals of the present study
Findings
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