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Global Lightning Accumulation (WMS)

Lightning is a brief but intense electrical discharge between positive and negative regions of a thunderstorm. The Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS) on the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite was designed to study the distribution and variability of total lightning on a global basis. The Optical Transient Detector (OTD) was an earlier lightning detector flying aboard the Microlab-1 spacecraft. The data shown here are compiled from LIS (1998-2002) and OTD (1995-1999) observations. Because each satellite saw only a part of the Earth at any one time, these data use complex algorithms to estimate total flash rate based on the flashes observed and the amount of time the satellite views each area.

NOTE: This animation is primarily designed to be used through the Web Mapping Services (WMS) protocol. Each frame in the animation actually represents an accumulation of a number of years of data up through a particular day of the year. Because of a limitation in the WMS protocol, each frame is marked only with a single date representing the last date for which the data was accumulated.


This animation shows an accumulation of daily
lightning climatology values for a typical year. That is, the
first frame shows the number of flashes per square kilometer
that occurred on a typical January 1 during the multi-year data
collection period, the second frame shows the total of Jan 1 and
Jan 2 flashes, the third frame shows Jan 1 through Jan 3, and so
on until the last frame (#365) which shows the total
accumulation for a typical year. As the year progresses, more
and more of the Earth experiences lightning, and hard-hit areas
experience more strikes. The most intense activity is in central
Africa. Areas where no lightning was measured are transparent,
letting the background image show through. The data pixels are
2.5deg on a side (144x72 pixels globally), and each frame has
been magnified to 720x360 pixels for greater
clarity.    This animation shows an accumulation of daily lightning climatology values for a typical year. That is, the first frame shows the number of flashes per square kilometer that occurred on a typical January 1 during the multi-year data collection period, the second frame shows the total of Jan 1 and Jan 2 flashes, the third frame shows Jan 1 through Jan 3, and so on until the last frame (#365) which shows the total accumulation for a typical year. As the year progresses, more and more of the Earth experiences lightning, and hard-hit areas experience more strikes. The most intense activity is in central Africa. Areas where no lightning was measured are transparent, letting the background image show through. The data pixels are 2.5deg on a side (144x72 pixels globally), and each frame has been magnified to 720x360 pixels for greater clarity.
Duration: 12.0 seconds
Available formats:
  720x360 (29.97 fps) MPEG-1   2 MB
  320x160     JPEG         8 KB
  80x40         PNG           5 KB
  720x360     Frames
  144x72       Frames
  160x80       PNG           20 KB
How to play our movies

This product is available through our Web Map Service.   Click here to learn more.


This color scale for the lightning accumulation animation ranges from deep blue (less than 10 flashes per square kilometer) through deep red (more than 60 flashes per square kilometer).
   This color scale for the lightning accumulation animation ranges from deep blue (less than 10 flashes per square kilometer) through deep red (more than 60 flashes per square kilometer).

Available formats:
  320 x 90           PNG   1 KB

Animation Number:3143
Animator:Jeff de La Beaujardiere (SVS) (Lead)
Completed:2005-04-08
Scientist:Jeff Halverson (JCET UMBC)
Instruments:TRMM/LIS
 Microlab-1/OTD
Data set:Lightning
Data Collected:1995/04 through 2002/12
Series:TRMM Lightning
 WMS
Keywords:
DLESE >> Atmospheric science
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Atmosphere >> Atmospheric Electricity >> Lightning
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Atmosphere >> Atmospheric Phenomena >> Lightning
GCMD >> Location >> Global
More Information on this topic available at:
http://thunder.nsstc.nasa.gov/primer/
View Animation in Google Earth Google Earth KML file is available here.
DEPC Metadata is available here.
 
 
Please give credit for this item to
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Scientific Visualization Studio


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