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Low-Pressure Electrical Discharge Experiment to Simulate High-Altitude Lightning Above Thunderclouds

NASA/TP-3578, Jarzembski, M.A. and Srivastava*, V., Low-Pressure Electrical Discharge Experiment to Simulate High-Altitude Lightning Above Thunderclouds, Space Sciences Laboratory, Science and Engineering Directorate. NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812 and *Global Hydrology and Climate Center, 977 Explorer Blvd., Huntsville, AL 35806., August 1995, pp. 28, Format(s): PDF 1171k

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Recently, extremely interesting high-altitude cloud-ionosphere electrical discharges, like lightning above thunderstorms, have been observed from NASA's space shuttle missions and during airborne and ground-based experiments. To understand these discharges, a new experiment was conceived to simulate a thundercloud in a vacuum chamber using a dielectric in particulate form into which electrodes were inserted to create charge centers analogous to those in an electrified cloud. To represent the ionosphere, a conducting medium (metallic plate) was introduced at the top of the chamber. It was found that for different pressures between approximately 1 and 300 mb, corresponding to various upper atmospheric altitudes, different discharges occurred above the simulated thundercloud, and these bore a remarkable similarity to the observed atmospheric phenomena. At pressures greater than 300 mb, these discharges were rare and only discharges within the simulated thundercloud were observed. Use of a particulate dielectric was critical for the successful simulation of the high-altitude lightning.
Keywords:atmospheric electricity, lightning
CASI Document ID Number:96N13006
Subjects:Geoscience: Geophysics
ID Code:294
Deposited On:27 June 2002