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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 2014 Volume 184, Number 11, Pages 1153–1176 (Mi ufn4939)

This article is cited in 30 papers

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

Electrical cycle in the Earth's atmosphere

B. M. Smirnov

Joint Institute for High Temperatures, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow

Abstract: A qualitative physical picture of atmospheric electricity as a secondary phenomenon of atmospheric water circulation is presented using the key electrical atmospheric processes, their average observed parameters, and a detailed analysis of separate processes as the basis. The electrical processes begin with the charging of aerosols at kilometer altitudes due to aerosols of different aggregate states colliding with one another. Atmospheric electric currents arise from the fall speed difference (in cumulus clouds) between mass-different positively and negatively charged aerosols, resulting in aerosols with a negative charge of, on average, (25–30)e at the lower edge of a cloud. This creates an electric field between Earth and the cloud, and the subsequent penetration of streams of warm wet air into the cloud causes the atmosphere to electrically break down, thus producing lightning flashes. At the same time, these processes cause aerosols to grow and to fall as rain onto Earth. Processes in atmospheric air, including those involving aerosols, electrons, and ions, provide a unified physical picture of electric phenomena in the terrestrial atmosphere.

PACS: 92.60.Bh, 92.60.Mt, 92.60.Pw

Received: January 20, 2014
Revised: June 28, 2014
Accepted: July 15, 2014

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0184.201411a.1153


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 2014, 57:11, 1041–1062

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