Lightning processes generate a diverse collection of optical pulses depending on how current traverses the lightning channels. These signals are then broadened spatially and temporally via multiple scattering in the clouds. The resulting optical waveforms measured from space with instruments like the photodiode detector (PDD) on the Fast On-orbit Recording of Transient Events (FORTE) satellite have a variety of shapes. In this study, we use coincident optical and Radio Frequency (RF) measurements to document the properties of optical PDD waveforms associated with different types of lightning, estimate delays from scattering in the clouds, and comment on how pulse shape impacts optical lightning detection. We find that the attributes of optical pulses recorded by the PDD are generally consistent with prior studies, but vary across the globe and with event amplitude. The brightest lightning tends to be single-peaked with faster rise times (median: ~100 µs) and shorter effective widths (median: ~400 µs). Dim events also include cases of broad optical waveforms with sustained optical emission throughout the PDD record, which the pixelated FORTE LLS instrument has difficulty detecting. We propose that this is due to the optical signal being divided between individual pixels that are each, individually, not bright enough to trigger the LLS. We use PDD waveforms and Monte Carlo radiative transfer modeling to demonstrate that increasing the temporal and spatial resolution of a pixelated lightning imager will make it more difficult to detect these broad / dim pulses as their energy becomes divided between additional pixels / integration frames.
Space-based optical lightning sensors including the Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS) and Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) are pixelated imagers that detect lightning as transient increases in cloud-top illumination. Detection requires optical lightning emissions to escape the cloud-top to space with sufficient energy to trigger a pixel on the imaging array. Through scattering and absorption, certain clouds are able to block most light from reaching the instrument, causing a reduction in Detection Efficiency (DE). We use cases of radiant lightning emissions that illuminate large cloud-top areas to examine scenarios where clouds block light in only certain pixels on the imaging array. In some cases, these anomalies in the spatial radiance distribution from the lightning pulse leads to “holes” in the optical lightning flash where certain pixels fail to trigger, entirely. Such holes are identified algorithmically in the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite LIS record over the southern Continental United States, and the microphysical properties of the coincident storm region are queried. We find that holes primarily occur in tall (IR Tb < 235 K) convection (87%) and overhanging anvil clouds (10%). The remaining 3% of holes occur in moderate-to-weak convection or in clear air breaks between stormclouds. We further demonstrate how an algorithm that assesses the spatial radiance patterns from energetic lightning pulses might be used to construct an optical transmission gridded stoplight product for GLM that could help operators identify clouds with a potentially-reduced DE.
We use the coincident optical and radio-frequency measurements taken by the FORTE satellite to shed light on common optical signatures recorded by NASA and NOAA lightning imagers during Cloud-to-Ground (CG) lightning. We build flash cluster data for FORTE using the same clustering techniques as GLM and document the optical / RF evolution of an oceanic hybrid -CG flash over its 656 ms duration. The flash began with strong VHF emission from a Narrow Bipolar Event (NBE) that initiated a period of normal bilevel intracloud (IC) activity in two vertical layers (8 km and 12 km) that lasted for 490 ms. VHF waveforms show step leader activity ahead of seawater attachment in the return stroke. All impulsive VHF sources after the stroke come from the lower (8 km layer) only. K-changes are noted following the return stroke, but no subsequent strokes are detected. The optical flash began 136 ms after the NBE RF pulse. 22 of the 30 optical groups were dim and occurred during the in-cloud phase of the flash. This activity included both isolated pulses and sustained periods of illumination over tens of milliseconds. Initial cloud pulses accounted for 23% of the total optical radiance from the flash. Illumination during the return stroke contributed a further 58% of the total radiance, and the K-changes and cloud pulses after the stroke supplied the remaining 19%. These results highlight the benefit of having RF alongside optical lightning measurements for clarifying signatures in the optical data and providing information on their physical origins.