The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 30, 2003, Image 6

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    1
Sell Tech
The Battalion
Page 6A * Thursday, October 30,20
Aggies feeling the HEAT
By
Amelia Williamson
THE BATTALION
Since the beginning of time, lightning has
struck awe and fear into the hearts of humans.
When lightning flashes, not only does it light up
the sky, it also lights up the curiosity of a research
group in the Department of Atmospheric Sciences
at Texas A&M.
The atmospheric sciences department has stud
ied lightning patterns for years and discovered
there is an elevated flash density, the number of
lightning flashes that come to
ground per unit area, in Houston.
The city with the highest flash
density in the United States is
Tampa Bay, Fla. High areas of
lightning exist from Florida all
along the Gulf Coast, leading to an
exceedingly elevated flash density
over Houston. This gives Houston
the second highest flash density in
the United States, along with the
title of lightning capital of Texas.
The changes that humans are
making in the earth’s climate may
seem small now, but as time goes
by, drastic changes could occur,
Zhang said.
“This has become a global-
This has become
a global-wide issue
and we don't know
what the climate
will be 100 years
r ”
from now.
lightning occurs within the cloud and does not
touch ground. This type of lightning can be seen
striking from one part of a cloud to another or as
bright spots in clouds. During a thunderstorm,
there is about four times as much intra-cloud
lightning as cloud-to-ground lightning.
Flash density is measured by instruments that
are part of the lightning detection network in the
United States. There are approximately 1 15 light
ning sensors placed all across the country that
measure cloud-to-ground lightning by picking up
the electromagnetic energy produced by lightning,
according to Orville.
“You hear that (electromagnet
ic) energy if you have your radio
on during a thunderstorm and you
hear a burst of static,” Orville
explained. “That’s noise to you
and it might be annoying to you,
but it’s really information that is
picked up by these sensors ... and
is used to detennine the direction
from which the radiation came.”
If two sensors pick up the same
flash of lightning, the sensors can
pinpoint where the lightning hit
the ground using triangulation.
These sensors record approxi
mately 30 million flashes of light
ning that hit the ground in the
— Renyi Zhing
atmospheric sciences
associate professor
wide issue and we don’t know what the climate
will be 100 years from now,” Renyi Zhang, atmos
pheric sciences associate professor, said. “This
(project) has a very broad impact, scientifically.”
The research group’s project is called the
Houston Environmental Aerosol Thunderstorm
(HEAT) Project. The principle investigators are
Richard Orville, interim head of the atmos
pheric sciences department; John Nielsen-
Gammon, atmospheric sciences professor; Don
Collins, atmospheric sciences assistant profes
sor; and Zhang.
Two types of lightning occur during a thunder
storm: Cloud-to-ground lightning and intra-cloud
lightning. The type of lightning most often seen in
thunderstorms is cloud-to-ground lightning,
which occurs when lightning strikes the ground.
This is the type of lightning measured to find an
area’s flash density. Intra-cloud lightning is when
United States every year.
“We discovered the enhanced lightning activity
over Houston when we did student projects about
three years ago in a graduate course,” Orville said.
“The students actually discovered it, and we just
wrote it up — the students are co-authors with me
on this, so they actually have contributions in the
scientific literature based on the project that we
did in class.”
The HEAT Project was established to deter
mine the cause of the elevated flash density
over Houston.
One proposed reason is the vast amounts of
air pollution in the city, Orville said. When pol
lution is released in the air, aerosol particles
form and influence cloud formation in the
atmosphere. The small aerosol particles can
intercept sunlight and reflect it back into space,
therefore cooling the air and changing the
atmospheric conditions. Some scientists believe
Photo courtisy of Sttphin Phillips, mmosphlric sciences oradumisw
Researchers working with the HEAT project study
cloud-to-ground lightning such as the kind shown
above. This photograph was taken from one oil
researcher's windows in College Station.
these aerosoi particles can actually trigger
cloud formation.
Another reason for the increased number of
cloud-to-ground flashes in Houston could be the
heat island effect, Orville said. One of the major
sources of ground heat in Houston is the city’s
population of nearly two million. These people
move around and drive cars daily, producing large
amounts of heat. The petroleum refinery industry
in the Houston-Galveston area also produces a lot
of ground heat and moisture. The city contains
many roads, but not much vegetation, adding to the
ground heat there. Plants use photosynthesis to
turn sunlight into energy. Roads, on the other hand.
absorb the sunlight, making the ground ter
“In cities, you have a lot of roads, parkineli
and roofs, so there’s not much vegetation tops
up some of the heat,” Zhang said. “So, if)t
look at a map of the temperature profile, the til
is like a heat island - it is wanner than the a
rounding areas.”
All of this heat and moisture is added
atmosphere, which leads to increased cloud
thunderstorms and in turn, more lightning.
The complex, coastline may also playact
the elevated lightning patterns in Houston.'!*
See HEAT on page/
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