An Observation of Very Low Frequency (VLF) Electromagnetic Waves Generated by Lightning Strikes via RockSat-X

Authors

  • Breonna McMahon Carthage College
  • Ariane Boissonnas Carthage College
  • Nathaniel Lee Carthage College
  • Max Becher Carthage College
  • Thomas Shannon Carthage College
  • Michael Hernandez Carthage College
  • Jordan Rice Carthage College
  • Stephanie Bradshaw Carthage College
  • Adam McCulloch Carthage College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17307/wsc.v1i1.192

Keywords:

VLF, Electromagnetic waves, Sferics, Lightning, Ionosphere, RockSat-X, Sounding Rocket

Abstract

In an attempt to observe how very low frequency (VLF) signals from lightning discharges vary as a function of altitude, a sounding rocket payload was built and launched via the Colorado Space Grant Consortium’s RockSat-X program. The main components of the payload consisted of three magnetic field antennas, two pairs of electric field plate antennas, an amplification and filtration circuit board, and two microSD cards interfaced with high performance multi-core microcontrollers for data storage. Despite a flight anomaly preventing the retrieval of the stored data, low resolution telemetry data from flight shows the expected presence power line interference.

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Published

2017-01-27

How to Cite

McMahon, B., Boissonnas, A., Lee, N., Becher, M., Shannon, T., Hernandez, M., … McCulloch, A. (2017). An Observation of Very Low Frequency (VLF) Electromagnetic Waves Generated by Lightning Strikes via RockSat-X. Proceedings of the Wisconsin Space Conference, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.17307/wsc.v1i1.192

Issue

Section

Physics and Engineering