Early/fast VLF events produced by the quiescent heating of the lower ionosphere by thunderstorms

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Abstract

Large and easily distinguishable perturbations of the VLF transmitter signals due to interactions with thundercloud-driven ionospheric modifications have been observed and studied for about three decades. These events are called “early/fast VLF” or “early VLF” events due to their immediate detection (~20 ms) after the causative lightning flash on the ground and the fast rise time of the perturbed signal. Despite many years of study, the physical mechanisms responsible for these perturbations are still under investigation. Modifications of the sustained heating level of the ionosphere due to a lightning flash has been previously proposed as the causative mechanism of early/fast VLF events. The perturbations predicted by this mechanism, however, have been much smaller than experimental observations of 0.2-1 dB or higher. In this study, by using an improved 3-D thundercloud electrostatic upward coupling model which uses a realistic geomagnetic field, we find that the sustained heating model can predict perturbations that are consistent with reported experimental observations. Modifications in the quiescent heating of the lower ionosphere by thundercloud fields by individual lightning flashes may thus account for some observations of early/fast VLF events.

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Kabirzadeh, R., Marshall, R. A., & Inan, U. S. (2017). Early/fast VLF events produced by the quiescent heating of the lower ionosphere by thunderstorms. Journal of Geophysical Research, 122(12), 6217–6230. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JD026528

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