Introduction to the physics of sprites, elves and intense lightning discharges

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Introduction to the physics of sprites, elves and intense lightning discharges Michael J. Rycroft CAESAR Consultancy, 35 Millington Road, Cambridge CB3 9HW, and Centre for Space, Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, U.K. Chapter 1, in Sprites, Elves, and Intense Lightning Discharges Proceeding of NATO Advanced Study Institute, July 2004, Corsica Edited by M. Füllekrug, M., E.A. Mareev, M.J. Rycroft Springer, 398 pages, 2006 ISBN : 978-1-4020-4628-6 (soft cover) ISBN : 978-1-4020-4627-8 (hardback)

ATMOSPHERIC IONS For the atmosphere of Earth, or any other planet, the most significant variation is due to GRAVITY. For Earth, density of neutral gas decreases exponentially, with scale height, H ~7 km. Thus, for each 15 km of altitude, density decreases by an order of magnitude. Atmosphere is slightly electrified (weakly conducting) due to IONIZATION by COSMIC RAYS. Maximum production at ~15 km to 20 km altitude (Aplin and McPheat, 2005, Usoskin et al., 2005, Tinsley and Zhou, 2006). Also, at sub-auroral latitudes, due to relativistic electron precipitation (REP, ~1 MeV) events. Also, within polar cap, due to occasional solar energetic proton (SEP, ~100 MeV) events. At the Earth s surface, and up to a few km altitude, over land, due to RADON (a radioactive element) emanating from Earth. Produces ~ few (up to 10) x 10 6 ion pairs /m 3 /s.

ATMOSPHERIC IONS Ions collide with, and attach to, molecules, forming small cluster ions, e.g., H + (H 2 0) n, so humidity is important; also attach to pollutants. Small cluster ions attach to aerosols, forming large ions. Spectrum of sizes growth to cloud condensation nuclei (CCN)? (Yu and Turco, 2001, Harrison and Carslaw, 2003). Ion mobility μ = velocity / electric field m/s/v/m (or m 2 /Vs). Largest for smaller ions, in cleanest air, decreasing as mass increases. Spectrum of mobilities (Aplin, 2005). ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY is due mainly to small ions. σ = q + N + μ +q + - N - μ - 2 e N μ where e (=q) is the magnitude of charge on electron, and N is ion number density, ~ 10 9 /m 3, at ground level, maximum, ~ 6 x 10 9 /m 3, at 15 km altitude.

ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY σ above Earth s surface ~ 10-14 S/m at 30 km altitude ~ 10-11 S/m at 55 km altitude ~ 10-10 S/m at 80 km altitude ~ 10-7 S/m (night-time) Conduction current density J = σ E (Ohm s law). σ, scalar in atmosphere, tensor in ionosphere above 80 km altitude. Gauss s law div E = ρ / ε 0 ; in one dimension de(z)/dz = ρ(z) / ε 0. Charge layers exist wherever E(z) changes markedly with z. R c = ionosphere Columnar resistance, for a column of unit area. Generally, > 95% is below 10 km (Harrison and Bennett, 2007). 0 dz σ ( z)

GLOBAL ATMOSPHERIC ELECTRIC CIRCUIT D.C. Sources: thunderstorms, electrified shower clouds convection stratospheric aerosols from volcanoes TYPICAL VALUES Fair weather region Potential gradient = - E 130 V/m J z ~ 2 pa/m 2 (reduced in polluted air, Harrison and Bennett, 2007) Ionospheric potential ~ 250 kv Total current ~ 1 ka. For 1 m 2 column from ionosphere down to Earth s surface, J z = 2pA/m 2 = ionospheric potential, V R c = 250kV 125PΩ m 2. A.C. Source: lightning discharges intracloud (IC) cloud-to-ground (CG) both and + CG. Experiments: on surface, from aircraft, radiosondes, large balloons, rockets, satellites.

Rycroft et al., JASTP, 2000, Fig. 5

Tinsley and Zhou, JGR, 2006, Fig. 2

Rycroft, Fullekrug et al. book, 2006, Fig. 2

Rycroft et al., JASTP, 2007, Fig. 2

Rakov and Uman, 2003, Fig.1.3, p. 9 (from Hale, 1984)

Kokorowski et al., GRL, 2006, Fig. 2

Rycroft et al., JASTP, 2007, Fig. 12

FAIR WEATHER REGION Rycroft et al., JASTP, 2007, Fig. 15

SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATIONS OF GLOBAL CIRCUIT Ohm s law J = σ E applies in both the CHARGING part of circuit ( battery ), where J E is negative, and DISCHARGING part of circuit, where J E is positive. Considering simplest situations, four different types of variability may occur: i) if σ is constant, J and E are linearly related, ii) if J is constant and σ is increased, E decreases, iii) if E is constant and σ is increased, J increases in proportion to σ, and iv) J, σ and E may vary independently. SPATIAL VARIABILITY varying geographic location. Land or ocean, weather type, pollution, volcanic eruption,.. Geomagnetic latitude greater ionisation at higher latitudes.

As solar activity increases from solar minimum to solar maximum, solar ultraviolet flux increases, decreasing height of lower ionosphere slightly, and heliospheric magnetic field become more disturbed, causing more scattering of galactic cosmic rays away from Earth s magnetosphere, appreciably reducing electrical conductivity of stratosphere, especially at high latitudes (Ney, Nature, 183, 451-452, 1959), increasing R 1, resistance above thunderstorms, in generator part of the circuit, and raising ionospheric potential (for thunderstorm current generator not varying with solar cycle). TEMPORAL VARIABILITY AC GLOBAL CIRCUIT microseconds lightning discharge processes milliseconds VLF/ELF radio phenomena ~ 0.1 s Schumann resonances of Earth-ionosphere cavity minute to 1 hour evolution of thunderstorm cells, and thunderstorms day changes with local time, or Universal Time, Carnegie curve 27 days solar rotation 0.25 year season 0.5 year semi-annual 1 year annual 1.68, few years El Nino/Southern oscillation, Quasi Biennial Oscillation? 11 years solar cycle. SPATIAL VARIABILITY varying geographic location

CARNEGIE CURVE AND THUNDERSTORMS Williams, Global electrical circuit, Encyclopedia of Atm. Sciences, 2002, Fig. 3

SPRITES AND ELVES SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM Neubert, Science, 2 May 2003

Sprites over France, 29 July 2005, 01.40:50 UT, Eurosprite2005 campaign

Sprites over France, 11 August 2005, 22.44:15 UT, Eurosprite2005 campaign

DIAGRAMMATIC LIGHTNING DISCHARGES (IN RED) Altitude [ km ] Williams et al., JGR, 2006, Fig. 2

SPRITES, ELVES AND INTENSE LIGHTNING SOME KEY POINTS INTENSE LIGHTNING, over mid West of USA, near end of intense Mesoscale Convective System, ahead of cold front, at night. +CG discharge, taking ~ +100 C from height of 5 km to ground; continuing current is important. Charge moment formed by charge and its image in ground, large, ~100 C km, is destroyed. Equivalent to current of 100 ka, flowing horizontally for ~15 km or more, then vertically to ground. For discharge lasting ~ 1ms, current moment is ~ 1000 ka km. ELVES, due to strong electromagnetic pulse (EMP) from large +CG discharge (Huang et al., JGR, 104, 16943-16964, 1999) current ~ 50-200 ka. Heats atmosphere at ~90 km altitude, ~0.3 ms after discharge. Heated electrons excite nitrogen molecules which radiate N 2 first positive band (red). Appears as ring expanding horizontally at > speed of light (300 km/ms). SPRITES occur ~few ms after +CG discharge. Intensity several hundred kilorayleighs or more; first positive band of nitrogen (red), and also N 2+ first negative band and second positive band (blue). Start at 70-75 km, develop as downward positive streamers with bright tips, reaching 50 km in 2.5 ms; bright dots of light also appear. Simultaneously, upper portion brightens considerably, and spreads upward (negative streamers). Become diffuse glow where σ too large to support streamer propagation. ~10 ms after discharge, transient luminous events (TLEs) below 65 km have faded. Core between 65 and 77 km remains. Sometimes, sprites develop from bottom of halo of light at 73 km altitude (Cummer et al., GRL, 2006: Submillisecond imaging of sprite development and structure).

SPRITE IMAGES AT HIGH RESOLUTION Cummer et al., GRL, 2006, Fig. 1 and Fig. 2

SPRITES MORE KEY POINTS ELF radiation (up to 1 khz) by sprites: Cummer et al., GRL, 25, 1281-1284, 1998. Model as column of enhanced σ, currents ~ 5 ka flowing for ~2 ms over 25 km height interval. With its image in ionosphere, current moment amplitude ~ 250 ka km. Equivalent charge moment change ~ 500 C km; ~half that of causative +CG discharge. In agreement with observations of Hu et al., GRL, 29, GLO014593, 2002, and Cummer and Lyons, JGR, 110, A010812, 2005. J E positive for +CG discharge, or for sprite. Both represent dissipation of the global atmospheric electric circuit. For sprite extracting 10 C from 2 x 10 5 C stored in spherical capacitor, one sprite removes 0.5 x 10-4 of charge stored in global circuit, reducing fair weather electric field by same proportion. About 3 sprites per minute, globally. Could a change of fair weather electric field be detected experimentally, using a superposed epoch analysis method? Streamer-like structures in sprites have diameters of 10-300 m, and generally persist for 2-3 ms: Marshall and Inan, Radio Science, RS003353, 2006. See discussion by Williams, Plasma Sources Sci. Technol., 15, S91-108, 2006.

SPRITES THEORY OF GENERATION PROCESS Electric field above thunderstorm associated with redistribution of charge after +CG discharge is believed to be basic energy source for sprites. Streamers formed when this field exceeds threshold for conventional breakdown via propagation of positive streamers; this decreases with increasing altitude as neutral gas density decreases. Computer codes (either electromagnetic or electrostatic) solve Maxwell s equations self-consistently through atmosphere, with model σ profile, for response of middle/upper atmosphere to lightning discharge currents and thunderstorm fields. i) Conventional discharge when threshold field is exceeded; see Rowland et al., JASTP, 60, 831-844, 1998 Cho and Rycroft, JASTP, 60, 871-888, 1998 63, 559-580, 2001 Pasko, in Fullekrug et al. book, Chapter 12, 2006 Ebert et al., Plasma Sources Sci. Technol., 15, S118-129, 2006. ii) Runaway (relativistic) electron discharge For lightning initiation, see Gurevich and Zybin, Physics Today, 58, 37-43, May 2005 For sprite initiation, see Rousell-Dupré et al., JASTP, 60, 917-940, 1998.

-CG PRODUCING STORM +CG PRODUCING STORM Rycroft et al., JASTP, 2007, Fig. 13

BOLD LINES SHOW WHERE THRESHOLD FIELD IS EXCEEDED

IONOSPHERIC POTENTIAL AFTER LIGHTNING DISCHARGE Ionospheric potential -CG Ionospheric potential +CG Rycroft et al., JASTP, 2007, Fig. 14

CHANGE AFTER +CG DISCHARGE ( ) AND AFTER SPRITE ( ) Fair weather field Ionospheric potential

CHANGES DURING SPRITE DEVELOPMENT BOLD LINES SHOW WHERE THRESHOLD FIELD IS EXCEEDED