TY - JOUR
T1 - Sprite climatology in the Eastern Mediterranean Region
AU - Yair, Yoav
AU - Price, Colin
AU - Katzenelson, Dor
AU - Rosenthal, Neta
AU - Rubanenko, Lior
AU - Ben-Ami, Yuval
AU - Arnone, Enrico
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2015/4/5
Y1 - 2015/4/5
N2 - We present statistical analysis of 436 sprites observed in 7 winter campaigns from 2006/7-2012/13. Results show a clear peak in the frequency of sprite detections, with maximum values (<. 40% of events) between 00:30 and 02:15 LST (22:30-00:15 UT; LST. = UT. +. 2). The detection times of sprites are well-correlated with a relative increase in the fraction of +. CG strokes, which exhibit maxima between 00:00 and 02:00 LST. The morphological distribution of 339 sprites, that we were able to clearly identify, is dominated by column sprites (49.3%), with angels (33.0%) and carrots (25.7%) being less frequent. This is similar to reports of winter sprites over the Sea of Japan and summer ones in Central Europe. Other shapes such as trees, wishbones, etc. appear quite rarely. Single element events constitute 16.5% of observations, with 83.5% containing 2 elements or more. Clusters of homogenous types are slightly more frequent than mixed ones (55%). Our observations suggest winter Mediterranean thunderstorms to have a vertical structure in between high tropical convective systems and the lower cloud-top cells in Japan. The climatology shows the Eastern Mediterranean to be a major sprite producer in Northern Hemisphere winter, and offers ground-based coverage for future space missions.
AB - We present statistical analysis of 436 sprites observed in 7 winter campaigns from 2006/7-2012/13. Results show a clear peak in the frequency of sprite detections, with maximum values (<. 40% of events) between 00:30 and 02:15 LST (22:30-00:15 UT; LST. = UT. +. 2). The detection times of sprites are well-correlated with a relative increase in the fraction of +. CG strokes, which exhibit maxima between 00:00 and 02:00 LST. The morphological distribution of 339 sprites, that we were able to clearly identify, is dominated by column sprites (49.3%), with angels (33.0%) and carrots (25.7%) being less frequent. This is similar to reports of winter sprites over the Sea of Japan and summer ones in Central Europe. Other shapes such as trees, wishbones, etc. appear quite rarely. Single element events constitute 16.5% of observations, with 83.5% containing 2 elements or more. Clusters of homogenous types are slightly more frequent than mixed ones (55%). Our observations suggest winter Mediterranean thunderstorms to have a vertical structure in between high tropical convective systems and the lower cloud-top cells in Japan. The climatology shows the Eastern Mediterranean to be a major sprite producer in Northern Hemisphere winter, and offers ground-based coverage for future space missions.
KW - Eastern Mediterranean
KW - Lightning
KW - Sprites
KW - Winter thunderstorms
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84922383920&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.atmosres.2014.12.018
DO - 10.1016/j.atmosres.2014.12.018
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AN - SCOPUS:84922383920
SN - 0169-8095
VL - 157
SP - 108
EP - 118
JO - Atmospheric Research
JF - Atmospheric Research
ER -