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Revisiting the Detection of Lightning Superbolts
  • Michael Jay Peterson,
  • Matt W. Kirkland
Michael Jay Peterson
ISR-2,Los Alamos National Laboratory, ISR-2,Los Alamos National Laboratory

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Matt W. Kirkland
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Abstract

This study uses Fast On-Orbit Detection of Transient Events (FORTE) satellite observations to identify superbolt-class optical lightning events and evaluate their origins. Superbolts have been defined by Turman (1977) as lightning pulses whose peak optical power exceeds 1011 W. However, it has been unclear whether superbolts resulted from particular types of high-energy lightning process or whether they were the result of measurement bias. In the latter case, any decently-bright lightning process could be recorded as a superbolt if the sensor had a particularly clear sight line to the hot channel without thick clouds diluting the optical signals. Our 12-year analysis of FORTE superbolt detections indicates that the lower optical superbolt energy range (~100 GW) is dominated by normal lightning, but brighter cases are predominantly strong +CG strokes that originate from specific types of storms. Oceanic storm systems, particularly during the winter, and especially those located around Japan are shown to produce these intense superbolts. We suggest that some optical superbolts result from favorable viewing conditions and would not be identified as such by another instrument located elsewhere, and that others are associated with a unique set of physics that may merit the “superbolt” distinction.