July-August 2000
Science Observer
Invisible Lights in the Sky
One night in 1989, as Robert Franz, Robert Nemzek and John Winckler
of the University of Minnesota were out testing a sensitive video camera,
they accidentally captured a fleeting red glow above a distant lightning
storm. The enigmatic light turned out to be an electric discharge connecting
thunderclouds with the ionosphere high above--an atmospheric phenomenon
new to science that explained many of the strange lights that pilots, among
others, had sometimes seen while gazing at the darkened sky. Over the past
decade, other investigators have confirmed the existence of such “red sprites”
and have carefully studied these curious flashes (along with other eerie
nighttime lights called“elves” and “blue jets”). But only recently did
they learn that sprites can also form during the day.
Mark Stanley, a graduate student at New Mexico Tech, and three colleagues
reported the first detection of daytime sprites in the March 15 issue of
Geophysical Research Letters. These flashes of light would have
been exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to detect optically while
the sun was up, but Stanley and his colleagues used a completely different
tactic. They had built special radio equipment to study ordinary lightning
discharges that take place within dense thunderclouds--bolts that might
be quite bright but are nevertheless hard to see from a safe distance.
Stanley realized that the characteristic radio signature of sprites would
allow him to use this same apparatus to identify daytime examples, if they
existed at all.
Others had considered this possibility, too, but it was unclear whether
sprites could form while the sky is bathed in the sun’s light. The difficulty
is that solar ultraviolet photons keep the atmosphere ionized to lower
levels during the day than at night. Sprites normally start out in very
thin air (at an altitude of about 75 kilometers), moments after a huge
discharge of cloud-to-ground lightning creates a sizable electric field
higher up. Such whopping electric fields cannot arise within the conductive
ionosphere, which thus acts as a lid for the electrical goings-on below.
Because the base of the ionosphere drops to about 60 kilometers during
the day, sprites cannot begin to form at the usual level. And for a sprite
to initiate lower down, in more dense air, requires a larger electric field,
perhaps one greater than any lightning discharge can create--or so it was
thought.
Despite this uncertainly, Stanley and his colleagues decided to search
for daytime sprites. They began a concerted campaign in 1997, operating
their radio gear whenever promisingly large thunderstorms erupted. Because
the radio technique is sensitive to events taking place well over the horizon,
they followed electrical storms raging many hundreds of miles away. These
physicists looked intently during that entire summer for the fingerprint
of sprites during daylight hours. They found nothing.
“I never did look for daytime sprites after that,” recalls Stanley,
“I pretty much ruled it out.” And so he got on with other projects. One
was to conduct radio measurements that might provide “ground truth” for
a satellite that was launched that summer. The Fast On-orbit Recording
of Transient Events (FORTE) satellite detects optical flashes and radio
emissions from the atmosphere, primarily to help monitor clandestine nuclear
testing. But scientists also intended to use that satellite to make observations
of natural atmospheric discharges.
On August 14 of the following year, Stanley turned on his radio equipment
to record a fly-by of the FORTE satellite. The orbital geometry was rather
unfavorable, with the satellite passing a mere 15 degrees above the horizon.
But Stanley noted that storms were brewing in southern Texas, directly
below the speeding spacecraft, and he thought it might just be worth collecting
measurements. A few minutes later he was rewarded in a way he had not expected--with
the characteristic radio signature of a sprite. Stanley was shocked: “Five
minutes later, I saw the next one come through, and five minutes later
the next. I knew these had to be sprites.” Although his apparatus was switched
on for only 35 minutes, he had accidentally captured three sprites in a
tiny fraction of the time he had spent looking for them during the previous
summer.
Large nighttime sprite flashes red above a lightning
storm.
Credit Geophysical Institute/UAF
Careful analysis showed that the lightning discharges that spawned these
sprites were indeed exceedingly large. Specialists concern themselves with
the so-called charge moment, the product of the current and the height
of the discharge. Typical nighttime sprites take place after lightning
with moments of less than 1,000 coulomb-kilometers. The daytime sprites
Stanley recorded followed discharges with moments about five times that
size.
The requirement for exceptionally large lightning discharges explains
why daytime sprites are rare creatures--so rare, in fact, that no one has
detected any since Stanley’s fateful half-hour recording session nearly
two years ago. Stanley, for one, has certainly tried again to find more
examples, and he points out that Matt Heavner of the Los Alamos National
Laboratory, who operates a network of specialized radio receivers capable
of detecting such sprites, has also failed.
Telltale radio signature contains two characteristic
humps.
Why was the 14th of August 1998 so different from other days? The Texas
storm that aroused Stanley’s curiosity was large but not exceptionally
so. “I’ve certainly seen bigger storms over the Great Plains,” he remarks.
Stanley speculates that this particular storm might have been special because
it carried so much moisture; the areas it flooded made the national news.
But what exactly allows a rare thunderstorm to generate just the right
conditions for a daytime sprite remains something of a mystery. In any
event, atmospheric physicists are pleased that Stanley was lucky enough
to turn on his radio gear at just the right moment--and that Franz, Nemzek
and Winkler were lucky enough to point their video camera in the right
direction back in 1989. Davis Sentman, a leading investigator of sprites
at the University of Alaska’s Geophysical Institute puts it well: “This
whole field is based on serendipity.”--David Schneider