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Lightning adds missing info to storm forecasts

By Hannah Hickey, University of Washington
A bolt of lightning strikes near One World Trade Center in lower Manhattan as a thunderstorm moves through the New York City area. File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI
A bolt of lightning strikes near One World Trade Center in lower Manhattan as a thunderstorm moves through the New York City area. File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

A new study shows how to apply lightning strike information to storm forecasts.

"When you see lots of lightning you know where the convection, or heat-driven upward motion, is the strongest, and that's where the storm is the most intense," says co-author Robert Holzworth, professor of earth and space sciences at the University of Washington. "Almost all lightning occurs in clouds that have ice, and where there's a strong updraft."

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The recent paper, published in the Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, presents a new way to transform lightning strikes into weather-relevant information.

The U.S. National Weather Service has begun to use lightning in its most sophisticated forecasts. This method, however, is more general and could be used in a wide variety of forecasting systems, anywhere in the world.

The authors tested their method on two cases: the summer 2012 derecho thunderstorm system that swept across the United States, and a 2013 tornado that killed several people in the Midwest.

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"Using lightning data to modify the air moisture was enough to dramatically improve the short-term forecast for a strong rain, wind and storm event," says first author Ken Dixon, a former University of Washington graduate student who now works for the Weather Company. His simple method might also improve medium-range forecasts, for more than a few days out, in parts of the world that have little or no ground-level observations.

The study used data from the WorldWide Lightning Location Network, based at the University of Washington, which has a global record of lightning strikes going back to 2004. Holzworth, its director, is a plasma physicist who is interested in what happens in the outer edges of the atmosphere. But the network also sells its data to commercial and government agencies, and works with scientists.

A few years ago, Holzworth joined forces with colleagues the department of atmospheric sciences to use lightning to improve forecasts for convective storms, the big storms that produce thunderstorms and tornadoes.

Apart from ground stations, weather forecasts are heavily dependent on weather satellites for information to start or "initialize" the numerical weather prediction models that are the foundation of modern weather prediction.

What's missing is accurate, real-time information about air moisture content, temperature, and wind speed in places where there are no ground stations.

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"We have less skill for thunderstorms than for almost any other meteorological phenomenon," says co-author Cliff Mass, professor of atmospheric sciences. "This paper shows the promise of lightning information. The results show that lightning data has potential to improve high-resolution forecasts of thunderstorms and convection."

The new method could be helpful in forecasting storms over the ocean, where no ground instruments exist. Better knowledge of lightning-heavy tropical ocean storms could also improve weather forecasts far from the equator, Mass says, since many global weather systems originate in the tropics.

The latest thinking on how lightning occurs is that ice particles within clouds separate into lighter and heavier pieces, and this creates charged regions within the cloud. If strong updrafts of wind make that altitude separation big enough, an electric current flows to cancel out the difference in charges.

A bolt of lightning creates an electromagnetic pulse that can travel a quarter way around the planet in a fraction of a second. Each lightning network site hosts an 8- to 12-foot antenna that registers frequencies in the 10 kilohertz band, and sends that information to a sound card on an Internet-connected laptop. When at least five stations record a pulse, computers at the University of Washington register a lightning strike, and then triangulate the arrival times at different stations to pinpoint the location.

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The network's online map shows lightning strikes for the most recent 30 minutes in Google Earth. An alternate display shows the last 40 minutes of lightning in different parts of the world on top of NASA cloud maps, which are updated from satellites every 30 minutes. The program is the longest-running, real-time global lightning location network.

Lightning already kills hundreds of people every year. That threat may be growing—a recent study projected that lightning will become more frequent with climate change.

"The jury's still out on any long-term changes until we have more data," Holzworth says. "But there is anecdotal evidence that we're seeing lightning strikes in places where people are not expecting it, which makes it more deadly."

On Nov. 19, NASA is scheduled to launch the new GOES-R satellite that will be the first geostationary satellite to include an instrument to continuously watch for lightning pulses. Holzworth will help calibrate the new instrument, which uses brightness to identify lightning, against network data. NASA also funded the recent research as one of the potential applications for lightning observations.

"GOES-R will offer more precise, complete lightning observations over North and South America, which will supplement our global data," Holzworth says. "This launch has been long anticipated in the lightning research community. It has the potential to improve our understanding of lightning, both as a hazard and as a forecasting tool."

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NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration funded the work.

This article originally appeared at Futurity.org. Source: University of Washington.

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