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August 5, 2013

Lightning 'halos' could help track fierce thunderstorms

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Scientists from the University of Reading and Bristol Industrial and Research Associates Limited (BIRAL) have discovered a new method of tracking fierce thunderstorms.

The research concerns thunderstorms that produce upper atmospheric 'halos', high altitude pancake-like created from strong flashes. Halos are generated by thunderstorms with lightning flashes 10 times stronger than normal¹.

Halos are too faint and short-lived to be seen with the but using images from low light cameras, they were thought to be restricted to a 50 km radius around the storm. Trial 'electric field transient' storm detectors at the University's Observatory and BIRAL have now showed halos actually extend several hundred kilometres.

This means that distant thunderstorms producing halos could be detected much further away than the 100km expected from just using the alone.

This unique thunderstorm detection method also provides a much simpler way of monitoring thunderstorms producing these mysterious halos, which are still relatively new to science, 24 hours a day. The only other method of halo observation requires sensitive, high-speed , which need a clear dark sky and unobstructed view of the horizon, which are restricted to a few locations globally.

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Professor Giles Harrison, from the University of Reading's Department of Meteorology and co-author of the study, said: "Lightning generated by thunderstorms regularly causes injury, damage and even fatalities in the UK, but predicting zones where lightning will strike is extremely difficult. At the moment are detected using the radio signals the lightning generates, which are used to identify regions of strongly disturbed weather. The new electrical approach adds information on the nature of the lightning hazard present, and how far it might extend from the storm system."

The prototype thunderstorm detectors which picked up the unusual measurements have been developed by BIRAL in collaboration with the University of Reading.

Dr Alec Bennett, from Bristol Industrial and Research Associates Limited and co-author of the study, said: "Lightning strikes can be electrically positive or negative. That means they either bring positive or negative charge down to ground, but not both. What we've observed is that the same lightning strike appears positive in Portishead but negative in Reading. That's very odd, and is the key pointer to something else going on."

The work is published in the American Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Society's journal Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Review Letters.

Provided by University of Reading

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