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LIGHTNING Jernej Slanovec Mentor: dr. Gorazd Planinšič Seminar2: 22.10.2003 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Abstract Lighting is a phenomenon, observed during thunderstorms. During the development of large cumulonimbus clouds, a separation of charge occurs, which means that part of the cloud obtains an excess negative charge, whereas another part acquires an excess positive charge. These electrical differences lead to lightning. In today’s presentation we will mostly try to describe the mechanism, which enables the charge to be transferred from the cloud to the earth – the formation of plasma channel, called a leader. Most of the atentiontion, however, will be devoted to streamer propagation. A streamer is also a plasma channel, but it is not capable of bridging long gaps of air, which is the case in lightning. Numerous streamers in front of the leader channel, however play a very important role, as we will see, and are therefore of great importance. Lightning discharges can be classified into positive and negative discharges and the two mechanisms differ from eachother. We will look only at the mechanisms of a positive lightning spark formation. 2 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Contents 1 2 3 4 5 Charge separation .................................................................................................................. 4 Basic stages of a lightning spark ........................................................................................... 5 Continuous streak photography ............................................................................................. 6 The leader stage ..................................................................................................................... 6 A positive leader.................................................................................................................... 9 5.1 A long streamer ............................................................................................................... 9 5.1.1 Current and field in the streamer ............................................................................ 15 5.2 The necessity of a streamer accompaniment................................................................. 17 5.3 Current in the leader ......................................................................................................... 17 5.4 Field in the leader channel ............................................................................................... 19 3 Jernej Slanovec Lightning 1 Charge separation The origin of charge separation is not yet fully understood. What seems to be a fact is that lightning occurs in the violent mature stage of the cumulonimbus cloud. Therefore we assume, that charge separation must be related to a rapid vertical movements within the cloud. These tall clouds mainly form in the summertime, which explains the lack of lightning in the winter. An important fact seems to be the observation, that lightning rarely occurs before the growing cloud penetrates the 5-kilometer level. This suggests, that the formation of ice crystals in the upper, cooler regions of the cloud are of great importance for the separation of the charge. Some cloud physicists believe, that charge separation occurs during the formation of ice pellets. Experiments show, that as droplets begin to freeze, positively charged ions are concentrated in the colder regions of the droplets, whereas negatively charged ions are concentrated in the warmer regions. So as the droplet freezes from the outside in, it develops a positively charged shell and a negatively charged interior. As the interior begins to freeze, it expands and shatters the outside shell. The smaller positively charged ice fragments are carried upwards by turbulence, and the heavier core eventually caries it’s negative charge toward the cloud base. As a result of numerous such events, the upper part of the cloud is left with a positive charge and the lower portion of the cloud maintains an overall negative charge with small positively charged pockets (figure 1.1). Figure 1.1: The dipole model of the charge distribution in a storm cloud[1]. 4 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Under such conditions a lightning may strike. Lightning discharges can be classified into two main groups – intercloud discharges and ground strikes. The frequency of the former is two to three times higher than that of the latter. Ground strikes can further be divided into descending and ascending sparks, the direction of growth being indicated by branches diverging downwards or upwards (figure 1.2). Figure 1.2. A photograph of an ascending (left) and of a descending (right) lightning[1] Lightning spark transports charge to the ground thus characterising its polarity: negative or positive. About 90% of descending sparks carry a negative charge (are negative) and about as many ascending sparks are positive. One can notice with a naked eye, that sometimes a lightning spark flickers. This are multicomponent sparks and they are usually negative. Positive sparks normally contain only one component. 2 Basic stages of a lightning spark Now if we want to transport the charge from the cloud to the earth, we need some sort of a conductive entity acting like a wire between two electrodes. The leader stage represents the initiation and growth of a conductive plasma channel – a leader – between the cloud and the earth or between two clouds. At the moment the leader touches the ground or a grounded object a return stroke is produced. During the travel from the cloud to the ground, the lightning leader tip carries a high potential comparable to that of the cloud at the spark start, the potential difference being equal to the voltage drop in the leader channel. After the contact, the tip receives the ground potential and its charge flows down to the earth. 5 Jernej Slanovec Lightning The same thing happens with the other parts of the channel, possessing a high potential. This unloading process occurs via a charge neutralization wave propagating from the earth up through the channel. The wave velocity is comparable to the velocity of light and is about 108 m/s. A high current flows along the channel from the wave front towards the earth, carrying away the charge of the unloading channel sites. The current amplitude is, on average, 30kA, reaching 200 – 250kA for powerful lightning sparks. The transport of such a high current is accompanied by an intense energy release. Due to this, the channel gas is rapidly heated and begins to expand, producing a shock wave. The current rise in the return stroke can exceed 1011 A/s, producing a powerful electromagnetic radiation affecting the performance of radio and TV sets. 3 Continuous streak photography Lightning development can be investigated by continuous streak photographs. This are images recorded on a continuously moving film. Suppose, that a bright spot is moving down towards the ground with constant velocity. Then an image recorded on a horizontally moving film (moving towards left), would represent a sloping line (fig. 3.1a). If however, a bright channel is elongating towards ground, the image will look like fig. 3.1b. If the velocity of film is known ( for example 1 cm/s ), then the scale on horizontal axes can be replaced by time scale, enabling one to calculate the velocity of the light source. Fig. 3.1: Image display in streak photography : (a) point source, (b) elongating channel[1] 4 The leader stage Each lightning strike transports some charge to the ground. Therefore there must be some sort of conducting entity in the space between the cloud and the earth. This conducting entity is a plasma channel called a leader. A leader is formed by ionization of air molecules by electron impact. If we want to ionize an air molecule, we need a certain amount of energy (example - ionization energy of nitrogen molecule : W(N2) = 27,10 eV). Electrons gain this energy from the electric field. In air, each electron has a mean free path, before it collides into the next air molecule. During this time, the electric field must provide the energy Wi ~ 30eV to the electron, in order for a collision to produce a positive ion and an electron. 6 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Under normal conditions, the value of electric field, that can sustain this ionozation process, is Ei ~ 30kV/cm (from this we can estimate a mean free path of an electron: 30eV F l E e0 l Wi l 103 cm ) . 30kV / cm e0 Measurements of the field, produced by the charge separation in the cloud, give the values 1 – 8 kV/cm for the cloud region, and at the earth, the storm field was found to be 10 – 200 V/cm. In spite of such a low field a leader does propagate, which means, that there is an intensive ionization occurring in its tip region, changing the neutral air to a highly conductive plasma. This is possible because the leader carries its own electric field induced by the space charge concentrated at the leader tip and transported together with it. If the leader tip radius Rm is small enough, the electric field in the space near the tip is locally enhanced thus making ionization possible ( Em ( Rm ) Q 4 0 Rm2 Ei ). A rough analogy to this process is a metallic needle connected with a thin wire to a high voltage source. If the needle is sharp enough, the electric field in the vicinity of its tip will be very strong. Imagine now, that the needle is falling down to the earth, pulling the wire behind it. The strong field region, in which the air molecules become ionized, will move down together with the needle. It is the leader, that determines the characteristics of a lightning spark. It can start somewhere in the cloud and then propagate downwards toward the earth. This is then called a descending leader and about 90% of descending leaders are negative leaders. However, constructions over 200m high and those in mountainous regions suffer mostly from ascending lightning. An ascending leader is initiated by a charge induced by the electric field of a storm cloud in a conducting, vertically extending grounded object. Contrary to descending, ascending leaders are mainly positive – 90%. Another feature which distinguishes positive from negative leaders is the way in which they grow. A positive leader develops in a continuous manner whereas a negative leader grows in a stepwise manner (figure 4.1). Each step in a negative leader is 10 – 200 m long with an average step of 30m, and the time interval between the two steps is 30 – 90 s. The averige velocity of leader propagation, is equal in both cases, and is about 3105 m/s. FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF Figure 4.1. A schematic streak picture of a positive ascending (a) and a negative descending (b) lightning leader ;[1] 7 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Figure 4.2. Streak photographs of a positive (left) and a negative (right) laboratory leader ; [1] The mechanism of a positive leader differs from that of a negative leader. We will try to describe the basics of positive leaders. 8 Jernej Slanovec Lightning 5 A positive leader The wave mechanism of spark formation was suggested in the 1930s. The channel thus formed was called a streamer. We will show, however, that a streamer is not capable of bridging long gaps between a cloud and the earth. It requires huge voltages to grow several meters in length. Typically – for a positive streamer – the relationship is U min Ecr l where Ecr is about 500kV/m. So for a distance of 3km the required potential drop between the cloud and the earth would have to be at least 1.5GV, which is well outside the values typical even for a powerful lightning (~100MV). Long gaps of air are broken down by a more complex structure – a leader. However, a streamer is a crucial part in the structure of a leader. During the leader process, a hot plasma channel (T= 5000 – 6000K; electron temperature can be higher Te ~10000K ) is travelling through the gap. Numerous streamers start at high frequency from the leader tip, as from a high voltage electrode, and form a kind of fan. They fill up a volume of several cubic meters in front of the tip (figure 5.1). This region is known as the streamer zone of a leader. The current sum of all the streamers provides energy for heating the leader channel thus maintaining its highly conductive plasma state. The streamer zone is filled up with charges of streamers that are being formed and those that have died. As the leader propagates, the zone travels together with its tip, so that the leader channel enters a space filled with a space charge. A charged leader cover is thus formed, holding most of the charge. It is this charge that changes the electric field in the space around the developing spark and lightning. It is neutralized on contact of the leader channel with the earth, creating a powerful current impulse characteristic of the return stroke of a spark. Figure 5.1. Two photographs and a scheme of a positive leader[1] 5.1 A long streamer Let us consider a well developed streamer, which has started from a high voltage anode and is travelling towards a grounded cathode (figure 5.2 ). The front portion of the streamer is shown schematically in figure 5.3 together with axial distribution of the longitudinal field E, electron density ne, maximum achievable density nc, and a difference between the densities of positive ions and electrons. 9 Jernej Slanovec Lightning This situation usually arises in nature, when the cloud above the earth is negatively charged. If then there is a high enough tower located in the vicinity, with a metallic rod extending vertically, the storm field is high enough to induce a positive charge in the rod (electrons run out of the rod into the ground). The rod acts like an anode and numerous streamers start to propagate upwards from this rod. This is how an ascending lightning begins. streamer Figure 5.2. A schematic cathode-directed streamer of length l : U0(x) external field potential; U(x) potential along the conductive streamer axis;[1] l Figure 5.3. A schematic representation of the front portion of a cathode directed streamer and qualitative distributions of the electron density ne, the density difference n+ - n- (space charge), and longitudinal field E along the axis.[1] The strong field near the tip is created by its own charge, and decreases approximately as E = Em (rm/r)2 . The radius at which the field is maximum is termed the tip radius rm and it approximately coincides with the initial radius of the cylindrical channel extending behind the tip. The strong field region in front of the tip is the site of ionization of air molecules by electron impact. The streamer moves forward as a wave. Let us try to describe the process of elongation (once the streamer is already well developed ) in a discontinuous manner – step by step : In front of the tip there is a high field region. Electrons are accelerated toward the tip, thereby ionizing air molecules. The number of ionized molecules depends, of course, on the initial number of electrons which in turn trigger this avalanche process. The initial electrons necessary for this are generated by the streamer in advance. What happens is that not all the molecules, hit by an electron, are ionized. In our case, N2 molecules get exited by an electron impact and as they 10 Jernej Slanovec Lightning emit photons, O2 molecules, whose ionization potential is lower than that of N 2, get ionized, thus providing the initial electron density n0 of about 105 – 106 cm-3 at a distance of 0.1 – 0.2 cm from the tip (figure 5.4). N 2* N 2 ; O2 O2 e Fig. 5.4. Initaial conditions, which lead to streamer elongation; Each of these electrons now gains energy from the strong field, ionizing air molecules thus triggering an electron avalanche. The electron density in front of the tip increases by many orders in magnitude (n ~ 1014cm-3).So now we have a number of free electrons (and positive ionized air molecules) in front of the tip (figure 5.5). We also estimate, that so far they hadn’t moved too much towards the tip. This free electrons are now attracted to the tip and move, in our case, to the left. Fig. 5.5. The initial electron have triggered an »avalanche « ionization process in front of the tip and the number of electrons there has greatly increased; The old positive tip has been neutralized and a new tip has been formed (figure 5.6). The tip has actually moved by much more than any single electron has, as is typical of any movement described as wave movement – individual particles in the system move by a little whereas the effect is transferred over longer distances. Fig. 5.6. The old tip has been neutralized and the new tip has been formed (exposed); 11 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Considering what we have just said about streamer propagation, one can naturally raise a question, how does rain affect the formation of a lightning spark. A leader namely propagates because of the fact, that each single streamer in front of the leader tip propagates. So if there are water droplets in the air, this certainly affects the whole process. Even though the moist air is a much better conductor than dry air is, it would seem, that droplets in the air hinder the charge flow; they have to evaporate. So if we look at this from this point of view, clearly there has to be an excess of energy available in moist and wet conditions as compared to dry conditions, since a certain amount of energy is needed for evaporation of water. We can estimate this energy, if we know the amount of water that evaporates during the leader development. The region in the air, that is surely free of water, is the leader channel. In the cloud, there is allways water present ( c~ 3g/m3) and then there is also some amount of water due to rainfall, which varies along the height of the cloud and is greatest at the base of the cloud. Since the intesity of rainfall varies between 1 – 30 kg/(m2 h) , we can take an approximate value of 10 kg/(m 2 h), that is 2.8 g/(m2 s). The velocity of average droplets falling towards ground is 10 m/s, so that the density of “falling” water is F ~0.3 g/m3 . The total density of water in the air is therefore about 3.3 g/m3 and the energy, necessary for evaporation of this water is about 8103 J/m3 . The leader (channel) reaching from the cloud to the earth, is about 3km long and ~ 10cm thick; so the volume of air free of water is V~ 0.1 23103 m3 = 30 m3 (this is a large estimation of a leader channel volume; we can therefore say V~10m 3 ). This means, that the required energy is about 105 J. A leader finds itself mostly outside of the cloud (F/c ~0.1) and therefore the better estimate of the energy, necessary for evaporation of water; is probably about WE ~ 104 J. The value of WE is larger than the energy Wi, necessary for ionization. An average leader transports about q ~ 10C of charge to the ground. If we take Wi0 ~30eV as the ionization energy of a single air molecule, then Wi ~q/e0Wi0=300J. The total energy, used for ionization of air molecules is, however probably higher. The charge that actually flows to the ground doesn’t give us the total number of air molecules, that had been ionized during the leader development, since some ions recombine with electrons, and so these electrons can’t reach the earth. So it is plausible to estimate the total ionization energy to Wi ~103 J, which is so same ten times smaller than WE . We can also estimate the energy that is used for the heating of the leader channel. The radius of the channel depends on the potential difference between the cloud and the earth and it varies between r0 = 0.1 cm – 1 cm (this is the radius before thermal expansion; after expansion r ~ 5 cm , as in the estimation above). The volume of air to be heated is so about (2r0)2 l ~ 22 10-4 3 103 m3 ~ 1 m3 , which corresponds to about 1kg of air. If T~5000K, then Q = mcpT ~1103 5000=5106J. From this we can conclude, that rain probably doesn’t affect the leader formation much, since a lot more energy is needed for heating as for ionization and evaporation of rain droplets. However, it can be, that only a consideration of Wi and WE is of should be of some importance, since ionization is essential for leader propagation. And since the two energies are comparable, this could suggest, that lightning strikes might “prefer” dry conditions. 12 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Now let us consider a fast streamer so that the calculation of electron production can ignore the slight drift of electrons from a given site for the short tome the wave passes by. In this case we can write: ne i ne t t rm nc dx exp i dt exp i 0 0 n0 Vs (1) where i is the frequency of electron ionization of molecules (figure 5.7); n0 the density of free electrons at t = 0 at the site of interest ; nc the density of free electrons after the wave passes by; Its time integral has been transformed to the integral over coordinate x, corresponding to the coordinate system moving together with the wave. Due to the sharp increase of the ionization frequency with the field, the region where the field is not much less than its maximum contributes the most to the electron production. This region of the wave is of the same order as the tip radius rm. So we can write an approximate expression for the streamer velocity Vs : im rm , (2) im i Em … ionization frequency at field Em Vs ln nc n0 Figure 5.7. Ionization frequency of air molecules by electron impact under normal conditions[1] The quantities Em and rm which determine Vs are interrelated by the tip potential Ut. For an isolated conductive sphere with uniformly distributed charge Q’ we have U rm Em Q 4 0 rm . A streamer looks more like a cylinder with a hemispherical end. It can be shown, that in a long perfect conductor of this shape, the tip charge is Q 2 0 rmU t (3) and the field at the tip front point is related to the potential by U t 2 Em rm (4*) 13 Jernej Slanovec Lightning (* infact, Ut should be replaced by Ut = Ut – U0(l), figure 5.2) An estimate of plasma density nc behind the tip can also be obtained. The electron density in the strong field region increases as ne n0 exp( imt ) for the time t rm / Vs . During this period of time, the electron density rises to its final value nc n0 exp( im t ) and the electron drift towards the channel with velocity Ve e Em exposes the positive charge of the new tip. The electron charge that flows though a unit cross section over time t is t 0 jdt t 0 t t e E n dq q dt n e vdt ee Em n0 exp( imt ) e m c D 0 0 dtS im S (5) It leaves behind a positive charge of the same surface density. The effective thickness of a positively charged layer is x rm (without proof), so that its field is approximately equal to Em D / 0 as is the case for an evenly charged plate. By substituting D from (eq. 5), we get an estimate: nc 0 im / ee (6) The least convincing part in the streamer theory seems to be the issue concerning the streamer tip radius (or the maximum field Em, as they are interrelated by (eq. 4) ). It is likely that their values are established under the action of selfregulation mechanism related to proportionality Vs i(Em) . im U t / 2 Em im rm From eq.(2) and eq.(4): Vs ln nc n0 ln nc n0 If, at constant tip potential Ut, the tip radius turns out to be too small, the channel front end will not only move forward but it will also expand, since the strong lateral field will trigger the process of ionization in radial direction. The value of rm will rise while that of Em will fall (according to (eq. 4)). Suppose, on the contrary, that the radius rm is too large and the field is too low. Here we are comparing the current maximum field E to the value Em, which we believe to be “the right one” for the streamer propagation. The tip looks like a semisphere and any slight plasma protrusion out of this surface will locally enhance the field just in front of the protrusion, since this protrusion will have a smaller radius of its tip. The ionization rate will greatly increase there (figure 5.7), and the protrusion will run forward on it’s own (eq. 2) as a channel of a smaller radius. But now again, the channel radius of this runaway protrusion will expand if it is too small. So this two mechanisms somehow regulate the tip radius. 14 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Numerical simulations show, that the streamer’s choice of maximum field seems to be Em 150kV – 170kV/cm. The tip radius then varies with the tip potential, approximately satisfying equation U t 2 Em rm . Example: Em =170kV/cm (in air), im 1.1 1011 s-1 , e 270 cm2 / Vs , rm = 0.1cm (corresponding to Ut = 34kV), n0 106 cm-3 nc 2 1014cm-3 Vs 5 106 m/s This is in aggrement with experiments, where Vs = 106 –107 m/s. 5.1.1 Current and field in the streamer The streamer starts to develop at the anode and then elongates. Its channel is under high potential which changes from the anode potential Ua at the starting point to a certain value Ul at the channel end, close to the tip potential Ut (the difference between Ul and Ut is about Emx <<Ut , where x<<rm is the effective thickness of a positively charged layer). The channel is electrically charged, since the potential at any point x along it is higher than the unperturbed potential of the space U0(x) created by electrode charges in the absence of a streamer. Assume first, that the channel is a perfect conductor. The capacitance of a long solitary conductor is C 2 0l / ln(l / r ) (7) and its charge is Q CU , because a perfect conductor is under only potential U . The average capacitance per unit length is Cl 2 0 C l ln(l / r ) (8) and it varies (slightly) with l and r. As an approximation justifiable by calculations, we shall use the capacitance per unit length (eq. (8)) and apply it to the real streamer channel. The charge per unit length is ( x) Cl U ( x) U 0 ( x) 2 0 U ( x) U 0 ( x) ln(l / r ) (9) 15 Jernej Slanovec Lightning When a channel elongates by dl, its new portion acquires charge ldl. Index l will denote parameters of the front channel end , x = l. Therefore 2 0 Ul U 0 (l )Vs q (10) lVs , Ut Ul t ln(l / r ) Example: at l = 1m, r = 0.1cm, Vs = 5 106m/s and Ul Ut 34 kV we get il =1.37A. il Here we must also mention that the current il near the channel end is lower than that of the tip, because the charge per unit tip length t Q / rm 2 0 Ut U0 (l ) is larger than in the channel ( remember that for a conductor of the shape in question we have Q 2 0 rmU t … eq. 3). So the current it much exceeds il . This current perturbation, however, has a local character, and is caused by the “displacement” of the old tip from its previous position into its new position. It cannot be detected by current registration from the anode side. If a current detector were placed at the site of a newly born portion of the channel, it would register current i it for a very short period of time t rm /Vs 10-9s ; then the current would decrease to il . We can now estimate the longitudinal field Ec in the channel behind the streamer tip. The current behind the tip is conduction current il Sj rm2enc e Ec . im rm By equating this expression to (eq.10) and using Vs and ln(nc / n0 ) Ut U 0 (l ) U 2Em rm with Ut = Ul , we get: il 2 0 UVs 2 0 U im rm rm 2enc e Ec ln(l / rm ) ln(l / rm ) ln(nc / n0 ) Ec { 2U / rm 4 Em , 2 0 U im ln(nc / n0 ) ln(l / rm ) e nc e rm 4 Em ln(nc / n0 ) ln(l / rm ) (11) 0 im /(ee ) nc } For a 1m streamer, the product of logarithms in the denominator is close to 130. Therefore, the field in the channel is Ec 5.2 kV/cm ( Em = 170kV/cm). Within the theory accuracy, this value does not contradict the average measured channel field of 5kV/cm necessary to support the streamer. 16 Jernej Slanovec Lightning 5.2 The necessity of a streamer accompaniment We have shown that the field in the channel behind the streamer tip is too low for ionization of air molecules by an electron impact (~5kV/cm). The only thing that could preserve the high conductive plasma state is high temperature of the channel. However, it can be shown, that the current in the channel is incapable of doing that. The volume (radius) of the channel is too great and can only be heated by a few degrees ( T<10K). The Joule heat release into the channel could raise the temperature sufficiently (T 5000 – 6000K) only for a smaller channel radius rm. We already mentioned, however, that then the lateral field becomes far too strong and ionization occurs in the radial direction, thus increasing the channel radius. Without the ionization process in the channel, the electrons are lost due to recombination and attachment (a 10-7s) to oxygen molecules. Plasma decays and the streamer looses its connection with the anode and dies. Fast streamers, supported by megavolt voltages, are capable of elongating to l 1m in cold air without loosing much of their connection with the original electrode. Lightning sparks, on the other hand, bridge gaps of d 3 km, and the formation of the plasma channel – a leader, crossing the gap, takes up to 0.01s. Thus, a key condition for a long-term spark development is the formation of a thick space-charge cover around it, having the same sign as the channel potential. The charge reduces the field on the channel surface, depriving the channel of its ability to expand due to ionization. It is only a channel with a small cross section that can preserve the ability to be heated. According to the Gaussian theorem, with Er /(2 0 r ) 2 0 U , the field Er at the lateral surface of the channel with a Cl U ( x) U 0 ( x) ln(l / r ) small radius r reaches values U / r ln(l / r ) 1 10MV / cm only for such a structureless channel as a streamer, and lateral ionization expansion immediately follows. The space charge of a streamer zone and leader cover, having the same sign as that of the channel potential, greatly reduces the field at the channel surface. Roughly, owing to the field redistribution by space charge, the huge potential (MV) now drops across a much longer length R of the streamer zone and the charge cover radius, rather than across a length nearly as short as the channel radius r. In this case, the field scale is a moderate magnitude U/R but not U/r, because even a laboratory spark has R 1m, and therefore ELateral ~ MV/m ~ 10kV/cm. 5.3 Current in the leader The way in which a leader grows in length is in a way similar to the one of a streamer. Currents of all streamers starting from the leader tip are summed up, heating the spark channel. This total current charges the region in front of the tip 17 Jernej Slanovec Lightning (pulls out the electrons), neutralising the charge of the old tip, and when a new tip is formed, the spark elongates by a length of about the tip length. Part of the streamer zone appears to be behind the tip, transforming to a new cower for the newly born leader portion. Although a leader has a more complex structure than a streamer, the capacitance per unit length of a leader system (the channel plus a cover) will be described by the same formula (eq. 8) if l is substituted by leader length L and the conducting channel radius r by cover radius R, the actual radius of a charged volume. Similarly, the current iL at the leader channel front is related to the tip potential and leader velocity VL by the same expression (eq.10) 2 0 U L U 0 ( L)VL (12) iL LVL . ln( L / R) Like in a streamer, the linear capacitance of a semispherically shaped streamer zone is Cl 2 0 . The tip current flowing into the streamer zone (13) it 2 0 Ut U0 ( L)VL is by a factor of ln(L/R) higher than iL , again like in a streamer. But since the leader logarithm is closer to unity (at least for a laboratory leader: L 10 m and R 1 m) the currents iL and it do not differ that much. A typical laboratory leader has i iL it 1A , U 1MV, and from (eq. 12) VL 2 104m/s which is close to numerous measurements, in which VL (1 – 2.2) 104 m/s. This is of course much less than the streamer velocity, since a streamer must “propel” itself away from the leader tip. Lightning leaders exhibit higher values of current. We can only guess about the values of descending leaders or make estimates. Ascending leader currents, on the other hand, are not difficult to measure and there have been many measurements of this kind. Normally, a current detector is mounted on top of a tower dominating the locality. The current nearly always rises in time. At the moment an ascending leader starts its travel, its current is lower than 10A, whereas at the end of the travel, it may rise to 200 – 600 A, with an average value of about 100 A. The current rises because the leader experiences grater and greater potential difference when approaching the 2 0 U L U 0 ( L)VL cloud iL LVL . It is the outer potential U0(L) that grows ln( L / R) (actually it falls, since the cloud is usually negatively charged) as the leader gets nearer to the cloud. Besides, the leader also goes up with an increasing velocity VL . A combination of these factors rises the current. 18 Jernej Slanovec Lightning 5.4 Field in the leader channel There are no direct experimental data on the state of a lightning leader channel. Therefore one has to rely on information derived from laboratory spark experiments. Streak photographs were taken continuously of a leader propagating from a rod anode to a grounded plane ( figure 5.8). Pulses of voltage U0 were applied to gaps of various length d. By measuring the streamer zone length Ls in the photographs at the moment the zone touched the grounded electrode and assuming the average zone field to be Ecr = 4.65 kV/cm, one can find the leader tip potential Ut = EcrLs and evaluate the average field in the leader channel as EL = (U0 - Ut)/L , where L = d – Ls is the channel length (table 1). Fig. 5.8: A streak photograph of a positive leader; streamer zone has just reached the ground cathode.[1] d [m] U0 [MV] Ls [m] L [m] Ut [MV] EL [V/cm] 5 10 15 1.3 1.9 2.2 2.3 3.2 3.6 2.7 6.8 11.4 1.1 1.5 1.7 750 590 440 Table 1. Leader paramater derived from experimental data.(after [1]) It is clear that the field in the leader channel drops with increasing length. In a leader 3 km long, the field in the channel is thought to be ~ 10 V/cm. 19 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Conclusion In the seminar I tried to present some basic features of lightning, because lightning is a phenomenon observed many times by everyone. Nowadays it is somehow “understood” by peple in a sence: “Lightning strikes because of the charged clouds!”. This “explanation” is far from describing even the basic picture. For me the main problem in trying to console my curriosity was, how a lightning can propagate through air, and in general, how a spark can cross gaps of air. That is why the central part of the seminar is about leaders and streamers. Perhaps one question often raised is, wheather lightning strikes could serve as a power supply. The answer is: “No!”. A very quick calculation can convice us of that. The voltage between the cloud and the earth can hardly exceed 100MV, and the transported charge is less than 100C. Maximum energy release is so 1010 J, which is less than a family cottage consumes in a year for heating, illumination and other needs. Still more, only a small portion of this energy can be utilized, since most of it is dissipatated in the atmospfere. All storms send to the earth an average of 4 – 5 lightning sparks per square kilometer over a year, providing a power of less than 1kW/km2. In a country of 500km 400 km, this is about 200MV, which is a very small value compared with the electrical power produced by an industrial country. If we also imagine the complicated infrastructure (overground nets?) that would be needed for utilization of such energy , we come to realize, that the idea is not a very good one. 20 Jernej Slanovec Lightning Reference Bazelyan, E. M. and Raizer, Y. P. : Lightning Physics and Lightning Protection (Bristol [England], Philadelphia: Institute of Physics Pub., 2000) 21