Implication of Subsequent Leaders in the Gigantic Jet

Wen Qian Chang, Yan Mou Lai, Cheng Ling Kuo, Janusz Mlynarczyk, Zhong Yi Lin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Most of the lightning appears below the cloud or inside the cloud. Unlike conventional lightning, blue jets and gigantic jets (GJ) produce upward discharge since electric discharge occurs as a form of cloud-to-air leader. We analyzed a gigantic jet recorded in the 2022 Taiwan campaign. For our color photograph recorded in the observation, high spatial resolution (150 m) at a close distance (140 km) resolves the important spatial features of the GJ phenomena. First, the GJ propagated upwardly as the fully developed jet with a maximum height of ~80 km above the cloud top ~17 km. After the fully developed stage, the subsequent leader reached its top height of ~30 km with a width of 0.5–1.0 km. The subsequent leader attempted but failed to develop from leader to fully developed jet. The subsequent leader may be interpreted as a negative stepped leader associated with cloud rebrightening, similar to the subsequent stroke in the multi-stroke lightning. Besides, the relatively higher IC flash rates associated with the rise of cloud tops benefit the required meteorological conditions for developing gigantic jets.

Original languageEnglish
Article number781
JournalAtmosphere
Volume15
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Keywords

  • gigantic jet
  • lightning
  • sprite
  • thunderstorm

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