Severe weather forecasting is an important tool for mitigating damages brought by intense lightning, large hail, heavy precipitation, strong winds, or tornadoes during thunderstorms, yet the reliability of such forecasts suffers from our limited understanding of the severe weather generative processes inside thunderclouds. With an increasing knowledge of the occurrence context of distinct types of lightning within storms, lightning remote sensing may elucidate the kinematic and microphysical environment where severe weather initiates. In particular, distinct energetic intra-cloud (IC) lightning discharges, compact intra-cloud lightning discharges [CID; e.g., Nag and Rakov, 2010] and energetic intra-cloud pulses [EIP; e.g., Lyu et al., 2015], have been shown to have different occurrence contexts, making them strong candidates for thunderstorm remote sensing research. In this study, observations from the RELAMPAGO field campaign in Argentina (November 1 to December 12th 2018) are used to determine lightning flash rates and the prevalence of different energetic lightning types in RELAMPAGO storms, enabling further research on the link between lightning activity and severe weather production inside thunderstorms.Lightning events during RELAMPAGO were observed by a deployed array of four Low-Frequency (LF, ~1-400 kHz) radio receivers. Using time of arrival, magnetic direction finding, and peak amplitude for each observed event at different stations, lightning source locations are estimated using a statistical least squares filter, along with clock and site errors associated with the receivers. Return stroke peak current for each event is also estimated in the filter, using an atmospheric attenuation observation model. The energetic lightning events in the campaign are then classified automatically between cloud-to-ground (CG), IC, CID or EIP, following an improved parametrization scheme originally proposed by Lyu et al. [2015]. In this paper we present the geolocation and classification of RELAMPAGO lightning events, and we also provide an analysis of lightning flash rates during the campaign. A few individual thunderstorm case studies are also discussed, which are augmented by other meteorological data from dual-polarimetric radar, hailpads, and other sources.
A particular strength of lightning remote sensing is the variety of lightning types observed, each with a unique occurrence context and characteristically different emission. Distinct energetic intra-cloud (EIC) lightning discharges – compact intra-cloud lightning discharges (CIDs) and energetic intra-cloud pulses (EIPs) – produce intense RF radiation, suggesting large currents inside the cloud, and they also have different production mechanisms and occurrence contexts. A Low-Frequency (LF) lightning remote sensing instrument array was deployed during the RELAMPAGO field campaign in west central Argentina, designed to investigate convective storms that produce high-impact weather. LF data from the campaign can provide a valuable dataset for researching the lightning context of EICs in a variety of sub-tropical convective storms. This paper describes the production of an LF-CID dataset in RELAMPAGO, and includes a preliminary analysis of CID prevalence. Geolocated lightning events and their corresponding observed waveforms from the RELAMPAGO LF dataset are used in the classification of EICs. Height estimates based on skywave reflections are computed, where pre-fit residual data editing is used to improve robustness against outliers. Even if EIPs occurred within the network, given the low number of very high peak current events and receiver saturation, automatic classification of EIPs may not be feasible using this dataset. The classification of CIDs, on the other hand, is straightforward and their properties, for both positive and negative polarity, are investigated. A few RELAMPAGO case studies are also presented, where high variability of CID prevalence in ordinary storms and high-altitude positive CIDs, possibly in overshooting tops, are observed.