Abstract
While multiple lightning detection systems provide geographical
locations of lightning events across the globe, robust lightning
altitude measurements on a global scale have proven elusive. Space-based
platforms have an advantageous viewing geometry over ground-based
systems for making these measurements, but prior studies with the Fast
On-orbit Recording of Transient Events (FORTE) satellite were limited to
a few thousand events. In this study, we apply the same technique for
calculating source altitude from the previous efforts to a large catalog
of hundreds of thousands of global FORTE in-cloud lightning events that
were coincident with flashes geolocated by its lightning imager between
1997 and 2003. We use this data to document global variations in
lightning altitude. As in previous studies, we find that FORTE primarily
resolves sources from the upper (positive) charge layer at
~11 km altitude in normal thunderstorms. However,
sources are also recorded from other charge layers in the storm, and
from leaders developing between layers. In particular, we note a
pronounced increase in source altitude in the first 20 ms of FORTE
flashes from the negative leader developing upward into the upper
positive charge layer. Regions known for wintertime and/or stratiform
lightning have increased contributions from low-altitude sources, while
tropical regions particularly around Panama and the Maritime Continent
have the greatest concentrations of high-altitude sources.