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Lightning
is the passage of a large spark of electricity
from cloud to ground, or from cloud to cloud.
The electrical charge is generated by violent
vertical motions of air in storm clouds,
which can also produce heavy showers of rain
or hail, and squally winds. Further information
about thunderstorms can be found in the leaflet
on thunderstorms.
A storm cloud can produce many flashes
of lightning during its lifetime of several
hours. Lightning is most common in equatorial
regions and over land because the storms
are often triggered by heating over warm
ground. |
| Why do we need to locate
lightning flashes? |
The accurate location of lightning is important
to public safety. As well as the obvious dangers
of the lightning strike itself, thunderstorms can
result in intense precipitation, severe icing, wind
shear, turbulence and gusting winds. These all offer
areas of concern to aviation, the construction industry,
public utilities and defence.
The Met Office's Arrival Time Difference (ATD) lightning
location system provides lightning location data
24 hours a day, seven days a week. The information
the system provides can be used to reduce the effects
of thunderstorms and lightning on human activity.
| Radio waves from lightning
flashes |
A lightning flash emits radio waves which spread
out like the bands of circular ripples from a stone
dropped into a pond. These radio waves travel at
the speed of light. The radio waves from nearby flashes
can be heard on a radio receiver as individual loud
crackles, over a large range of radio frequencies.
With a sensitive recorder, set at a particular frequency,
there is continuous background crackling from the
many distant lightning flashes that are occurring
worldwide at any moment. The shape (or sound) of
the burst of radio waves is unique to a particular
flash on almost all occasions. Simply listening to
the radio waves from a lightning flash gives no indication
of where the flash occurred. However, observations
of the time difference between the waves reaching
two or more receivers can locate the flash with considerable
accuracy.
The ATD system uses observations of the time of
arrival of radio waves from flashes at a frequency
of about 10 kHz. These waves travel long distances
around the Earth with little loss of strength (apart
from the unavoidable reduction with distance as the
waves spread out) or change in shape of the wave
pattern. In principle, lightning flashes can be detected
from the other side of the world, but in practice
the ATD system is used to locate flashes only within
a range of about 8,000 to 10,000 km from the UK.
| How are lightning flashes
located? |
A cork floating on a pond acts as a detector of
passing ripples by bobbing up and down. Several corks
can detect the same ripple pattern produced by a
stone being dropped into the water. However, they
will detect the ripples at different times because
they are at different distances from the point of
impact. The ATD system works on a similar theory.
The system consists of seven unmanned, automatic
lightning sensors at different locations. There are
two in the UK (at Camborne in Cornwall and Lerwick
in the Shetland Islands) and five located overseas,
at Keflavik (Iceland), Korppoo (Finland), Norderney
(Germany), Gibraltar and Cyprus.
All the outstations are linked to the control station
computer located at Met Office headquarters. This
automatically controls the system and collates the
lightning location data into various messages for
onward transmission to customers. It is also possible
to reconfigure the outstations from the control station
in order to optimise their performance and rectify
faults. This helps make the system resilient.
The sensors at all the outstations continuously
detect the radio waves generated by flashes of lightning
- these are called 'atmospherics', or 'sferics'.
A designated station in the ATD network then acts
as the 'selector' station. The sferics received at
this station are individually selected and then any
sferics observed around the same time at other outstations
are requested by, and forwarded to, the control station.
Because each sferic has a unique waveform shape -
its own 'fingerprint', which will be similar at all
the outstations that receive it - the control station
is able to match up the sferic waveforms received
at the outstations with the particular sferic it
has selected (a process operationally unique to the
ATD system known as waveform correlation).
The control station then designates one outstation
as the reference station for this flash. This reference
station is assigned an arrival time difference of
zero. The time of arrival of this particular sferic
at the other outstation that received it, in relation
to the reference station, is calculated. Then, by
calculating all the points where the arrival time
difference between the reference station and the
other station are the same, a line can be plotted
representing all the theoretical places with the
same arrival time difference between the two stations.
Drawn on the Earth's surface, this line will represent
a hyperbola.
If this same process is then repeated between the
reference station and another station that received
the same sferic, another hyperbola can be drawn,
intersecting the first one. Repeat this process using
all the stations that received the sferic waveform
and the control station computer will be able to
determine the flash location. If the sferic was received
at four or more stations then an unambiguous source
location can be defined. This will be the place where
all the hyperbolae intersect.
Calculated ATD hyperbolae.
The point of intersection is where the sferic will
be located.

The speed of the control station computer enables
lightning locations to be determined in this way
for anything up to thousands of flashes per hour.
A quality-control module in the control station
carries out various checks on the calculated lightning
flash locations ('fixes') before they are accepted.
If the fix does not pass the various checks, it is
rejected. In this way, whilst false fixes are not
completely unknown, their rate is maintained at a
very low level, ensuring confidence in the ATD system
output as a whole.
The ATD system measures location accuracy in points
of degree latitude and longitude. Converting from
this gives the approximate location accuracies as
follows:
| Over the UK |
|
5.0 km |
| Europe |
|
20 km |
| 3,000 km |
|
40 km |
| 8,000-10,000 km |
|
100 km |
If two lightning sensor receivers are about 300
km apart and a lightning flash occurs somewhere along
the line joining the two receivers together then
the arrival time difference of the sferic waveforms
ranges from zero to only one millisecond (1/1,000th
of a second). To obtain the required accuracy of
a flash location, the time differences at two widely
separated receivers must be measured to an accuracy
of about one microsecond (1/1,000,000th of a second).
To achieve this each receiver has a rubidium oscillator
- a form of accurate atomic clock - and the time
of arrival of the sferic waveform is measured with
that clock. Synchronisation of all the outstation
'clocks' is achieved by comparing them with GPS satellite
time signals every ten minutes. Any drift in timing
can then be identified and corrected. This ensures
accurate lightning location data. |