A case study of lightning, whistlers, and associated ionospheric effects during a substorm particle injection event

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Ionospheric Disturbances, Lightning, Magnetic Storms, Particle Precipitation, Whistlers, Broadband, Electromagnetic Coupling, Narrowband, Thunderstorms, Very Low Frequencies

Scientific paper

The relationships among cloud-to-ground (CG) lightning, sferics, whistlers, VLF amplitude perturbations, and other ionospheric phenomena occurring during substorm events were investigated using data from simultaneous ground-based observations of narrow-band and broad-band VLF radio waves and of CG lightning made during the 1987 Wave-Induced Particle Precipitation campaign conducted from Wallops Island (Virginia). Results suggest that the data collected on ionospheric phenomena during this event may represent new evidence of direct coupling of lightning energy to the lower ionosphere, either in conjunction with or in the absence of gyroresonant interactions between whistler mode waves and electrons in the magnetosphere.

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