Title: Lightning Climatology
1Lightning Climatology Oklahoma Lightning Mapping
Array May - September, 2004 - 2005
Paul Krehbiel New Mexico Tech September 28, 2005
2Lightning Mapping Arrays (LMAs)
- Utilize time-of-arrival technique
- Consist of 10-12 stations over 50-70 km diameter
area - Passive system locates impulsive radio
frequency signals produced by lightning (radio
'static') - Listens in a locally unused VHF TV channel (e.g.,
Ch 3, 5, 8) - Produce observations in near real-time (1-2
minute delay) - Provide good spatial accuracy and temporal
resolution - Existing systems
- New Mexico Tech LMAs Northern Alabama
(NASA/Huntsville), - Oklahoma (OU/NSSL), Langmuir Laboratory
(NMT), WSMR, ... - Vaisala (formerly GAI) LDAR II Dallas/Ft.
Worth, Houston (TAMU), - Kennedy Space Center.
3(See lightning.nmt.edu)
4Zoomed-in example Density of Points
Display Moore, OK tornadic storm May 10,
2003 10 min of observations (NLDN events in
green) -gt xlma analysis software
Texas
5Climatology Data from Oklahoma LMA
- The following slides show on a month-by-month
basis the number of located LMA sources as a
function of the day of the month and the hour of
each day, in the form of a 3-dimensional bar
graph (generated using the bar3 plotting tool
of Matlab). The vertical bars indicate the
number of sources per hour on a logarithmic scale
to prevent large mesoscale systems from
dominating the plots. The units are
kilosources/hour, with a threshold value of 1000
sources/hour being applied to discriminate
against weakly-detected, distant storms from
cluttering up the presentation (any storm of
reasonable size and within range of the LMA will
produce several thousand sources/hour). - To determine what the storms look like
during an active period, see http//lightning.nmt.
edu/oklma. - (Bar graphs are shown only for April through
September but are available for the entire year.)
-
6Number of located LMA sources, April 2004,
Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
7Number of located LMA sources, April 2005,
Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
8Number of located LMA sources, May 2004, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
9Number of located LMA sources, May 2005, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
10Number of located LMA sources, June 2004, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
11Number of located LMA sources, June 2005, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
12Number of located LMA sources, July 2004, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
13Number of located LMA sources, July 2005, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
14Number of located LMA sources, Aug. 2004, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
15Number of located LMA sources, Aug. 2005, Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
16Number of located LMA sources, Sept. 2004,
Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
17Number of located LMA sources, Sept. 2005,
Oklahoma
(Daylight 12-24 UTC 7 am 7 pm CDT)
18For real-time data plots, archived daily and
hourly, see http//lightning.nmt.edu/oklma
19Lightning Climatology STEPS 2000 Lightning
Mapping Array (NW Kansas, E Colorado, SW
Nebraska) May 24 August 10, 2000
20Two supercell storms in NW KansasSW Nebraska -
June 7, STEPS 2000 -13 station LMA network -
Close storm Low Precip - Far storm High
Precip - 10 min time interval - Continuous IC
lightning - Inverted polarity storms (deep
mid-level charge) - Only one NLDN event -
negative CG (real?) - Major advantage of total
lightning vs. CG only Note Major Ch 3 TV
interference, data processed with auto-
thresholding.
21Aircraft track and storms, May 25, STEPS
2000 (Aircraft being charged while flying
through down- wind cirrus/anvil cloud)
22 Example of Highly Dendritic Negative CG flash
Height vs Time
Height vs E-W
Plan View
Height vs N-S
23Number of located LMA sources, May 2000, STEPS
(Daylight 12-02 UTC 6 am 8 pm MDT)
24Number of located LMA sources, June 2000, STEPS
(Daylight 12-02 UTC 6 am 8 pm MDT)
25Number of located LMA sources, July 2000, STEPS
(Daylight 12-02 UTC 6 am 8 pm MDT)
26Number of located LMA sources, August 2000, STEPS
(Daylight 12-02 UTC 6 am 8 pm MDT)
27(The End)
28Time-of-Arrival Concept
impulsive lightning event at (x, y, z t)
z
y
x
29University of Oklahoma/National Severe Storms
Laboratory
30(No Transcript)
31North Alabama Lightning Mapping Array (NASA)
Map (10 stations)
http//branch.nsstc.nasa.gov/
One hour of real-time data
32New Mexico LMA Networks
33(No Transcript)