Technical Papers

A Kennedy Space Center Implementation of IEEE 1451 Networked Smart Sensors and Lessons Learned

A Kennedy Space Center Implementation of IEEE 1451 Networked Smart Sensors and Lessons Learned To meet the need for more specific and reliable information from ground support instrumentation systems and future spacecraft sensors and to support Intelligent Health Management Systems (IHMS), NASA’s Instrumentation Branch and ASRC’s Advanced Electronics and Technology Development Laboratory at Kennedy Space […]

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Direct Lightning Strikes to Test Power Distribution Lines—Part I: Experiment and Overall Results

Direct Lightning Strikes to Test Power Distribution Lines—Part I: Experiment and Overall Results The interaction of rocket-triggered lightning with two unenergized power distribution lines of about 800 m length was studied at the International Center for Lightning Research and Testing in Florida. A horizontally configured line was tested in 2000, and a vertically configured line

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An “anomalous” triggered lightning flash in Florida

An “Anomalous” Triggered Lightning Flash in Florida An “anomalous” rocket-and-wire triggered lightning flash, a flash whose leaders do not follow the triggering wire remnants to ground, is characterized via high-speed video images at 10 and 300 kilo-frames per second, still camera images, 66–72 MHz source locations from a Lightning Mapping Array, channel-base current, and electric

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ATTEMPTS TO CREATE BALL LIGHTNING WITH TRIGGERED LIGHTNING

ATTEMPTS TO CREATE BALL LIGHTNING WITH TRIGGERED LIGHTNING We describe attempts to create ball lightning by directing lightning, triggered from natural thunderclouds using the rocket-and-wire technique, through a variety of materials. Some of the observed phenomena have features in common with natural ball lightning or with laboratory attempts to create it: flame-like luminosity for up

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HIGH‐SPEED VIDEO OBSERVATIONS OF A LIGHTNING STEPPED LEADER

HIGH‐SPEED VIDEO OBSERVATIONS OF A LIGHTNING STEPPED LEADER High‐speed video images of eight branches of a lightning stepped leader recorded at a frame rate of 300 kiloframes per second (kfps) (3.33 ms exposure) are analyzed, representing the fastest published frame rate measurements of stepped leader stepping by about 1 order of magnitude and the first

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GEOMETRICAL AND ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE INITIAL STAGE IN FLORIDA TRIGGERED LIGHTNING

GEOMETRICAL AND ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE INITIAL STAGE IN FLORIDA TRIGGERED LIGHTNING We characterize the geometrical and electrical characteristics of the initial stages of nine Florida triggered lightning discharges using a Lightning Mapping Array (LMA) and measured channel-base currents. We determine initial channel and subsequent branch lengths, average initial channel and branch propagation speeds, and

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“CHAOTIC” DART LEADERS IN TRIGGERED LIGHTNING: ELECTRIC FIELDS, X-RAYS, AND SOURCE LOCATIONS

“CHAOTIC” DART LEADERS IN TRIGGERED LIGHTNING: ELECTRIC FIELDS, X-RAYS, AND SOURCE LOCATIONS We present the first published observations of “chaotic” dart leaders in triggered-lightning discharges. We examine four leaders that exhibited “chaotic” electric field derivative (dE/dt) signatures in their final 10 to 12 ms. The dE/dt signatures were characterized by bursts exhibiting widths of the

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THE ATTACHMENT PROCESS OF ROCKET-TRIGGERED LIGHTNING DART-STEPPED LEADERS

THE ATTACHMENT PROCESS OF ROCKET-TRIGGERED LIGHTNING DART-STEPPED LEADERS Time-correlated 1.54 μs high-speed video frames, channel-base current and current derivative (dI/dt), and electric field derivative (dE/dt) measurements are used to analyze the attachment process of triggered lightning dart-stepped leaders. Lengths, speeds, and durations of the upward-connecting positive leaders propagating from the launching structure are measured and

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COMMENTS ON RECENT OBSERVATIONS OF FAINTLY LUMINOUS FORMATIONS (FLF) CAPTURED USING PHANTOM HIGH-SPEED CAMERAS

COMMENTS ON RECENT OBSERVATIONS OF FAINTLY LUMINOUS FORMATIONS (FLF) CAPTURED USING PHANTOM HIGH-SPEED CAMERAS During 2015, the high-speed camera network at Kennedy Space Center/Cape Canaveral Air Force Station was used to study a newly-reported optical phenomenon associated with the attachment process of lightning leaders to ground. This phenomena, termed the “Faintly Luminous Formation (FLF)” by

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CORRELATED LIGHTNING MAPPING ARRAY AND RADAR OBSERVATIONS OF THE INITIAL STAGES OF THREE SEQUENTIALLY TRIGGERED FLORIDA LIGHTNING DISCHARGES

CORRELATED LIGHTNING MAPPING ARRAY AND RADAR OBSERVATIONS OF THE INITIAL STAGES OF THREE SEQUENTIALLY TRIGGERED FLORIDA LIGHTNING DISCHARGES Correlated Lightning Mapping Array and vertical-scan radar images are presented for three rocket-and-wire triggered lightning flashes that occurred sequentially within 17 min in the presence of a decaying multicellular convective storm system over north-central Florida. The initial stage

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