Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2/20/2015 5:26 PM, Dave Platt wrote:
In article , Kurt Stocklmeir wrote: I would like to know how much am and fm radio waves are made by lightning has any person tried this - when lightning is around use their radio to find how many watts of am and fm radio waves are made by lighning thank you for any answers I think you'll find that your question doesn't "map well" onto how lightning works. Saying "AM radio waves" or "FM radio waves" implies that there is a carrier wave, which is being either amplitude-modulated or frequency-modulated. Neither of these is the case for lightning strikes. Lightning consists of strong, irregular pulses of current with rapid rise times. Each pulse generates a broadband burst of electromagnetic energy, with energy content distributed widely across a whole range of frequencies. The figure I'm seeing is that a single lightning strike typically releases about 5 billion joules of energy (5 billion watt-seconds). Most of this is released in a very short period of time (under a millisecond). According to http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_info/thunder2.html about 90% of the lighting's energy is released as heat, less than 1% is released as sound, and the rest (call it 10%) is released as light (and, I presume, other frequencies of electromagnetic energy). There's a very strong electromagnetic pulse near the lighting stroke and the earth impact point, due to the high current flow. In the "radio" frequencies per se (e.g. from a few hundred kHz to a few hundred MHz) it's probably a fraction of a percent of the total lightning strike energy... mostly in sharp bursts at the beginning (and perhaps end) of each individual sub-stroke. That website is a little bit misleading, probably in the interest of not confusing the non-technical readers. After all, heat is also electromagnetic energy ![]() But effectively, lightning is a very broad band pulse - running from a few kHz (or lower) well into the high electromagnetic range. Strong strokes are even known to generate gamma rays (and according to recent theories, antimatter). But you're correct - the total amount of energy in the RF range (say 3kHz to 30GHz) is pretty small. As a sidelight - I remember back in the 60's a lightning detector project. Basically it was a pair of hula hoops; slit each hoop and wrap them with several turns of small-gauge wire. These fed a pair of balanced amplifiers which then fed the X and Y axes of a oscilloscope. A vertical antenna fed an unbalanced amplifier which then fed the Z axis of the scope to brighten or darken the trace, depending on the phase (and therefore the direction) of the incoming signal. Properly calibrated, the result would be a line from the center of the scope in the direction of the lightning stroke with the length proportional to the strength (and roughly inversely proportional to the distance) of the bold. It pretty cheap to build (I was a high schools student, after all) but a lot of fun to play with. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
World Lightning Map & 5-Year US Lightning History Map | Shortwave | |||
Getting hit by lightning | Shortwave | |||
About lightning etc... | CB | |||
Lightning Man! | Policy | |||
Lightning? IN/IL | Shortwave |