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NASA Facts: TRMM Instruments

Lightning Imaging Sensor

The Lightning Imaging Sensor is a small, highly sophisticated instrument that detects and locates lightning over the tropical region of the globe. Looking down from a vantage point aboard the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) observatory, 250 miles (402 kilometers) above the Earth, the sensor provides information that could lead to future advanced geostationary lightning sensors capable of significantly improving weather "nowcasting." From their stationary position in orbit, these future lightning sensors would provide continuous coverage of the United States and rest of the Western Hemisphere. One important goal is delivering day and night lightning information to a forecaster's work-station within 30 seconds of occurrence - providing an invaluable tool for storm "nowcasting" as well as for issuing severe storm warnings.

The lightning detector is a compact combination of optical and electronic elements including a staring imager capable of locating and detecting lightning within individual storms. The imager's field of view allows the sensor to observe a point on the Earth or a cloud for 80 seconds, a sufficient time to estimate the flashing rate, which tells researchers whether a storm is growing or decaying.

The sensor was developed by the Global Hydrology Center at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., in conjunction with Lockheed Martin, Palo Alto, Calif., and Kaiser Electro Optics, Carlsbad, Calif. The sensor provides information on cloud characteristics, storm dynamics, and seasonal as well as yearly variability of thunderstorms.

The Lightning Imaging Sensor is three times more sensitive than a predecessor satellite sensor known as the Optical Transient Detector. The sensor collects data day and night cloud-to-ground, cloud-to-cloud and intra-cloud lightning around the globe.

The staring imager is made of an expanded optics lens system which provides a wide field of view and a narrow-band filter which minimizes background light. A highspeed, charge-coupled device detection array behaves similarly to the retina of the human eye by creating an image of the lightning event and the background scene. A real-time event processor then extracts the signal, thus determining when a lightning flash occurs.

The optics lens system allows lightning detection even in the presence of bright, sunlit clouds. Weak lightning signals that occur during the day are hard to detect because of background illumination. This system will remove the background signal, enabling the detection of 90 percent of all lightning strikes within the field of view. Data recorded includes the time of a lightning event, its radiant energy - how bright the lightning flash is - and an estimate of the lightning location.

The Lightning Imaging Sensor is approximately eight inches in diameter and 14 inches high, while the supporting electronics package is about the size of a standard DVR. Together, the two modules weigh approximately 46 pounds and use about 25 watts of power.

The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission is NASA's first mission dedicated to observing and understanding the tropical rainfall and how this rainfall affects the global climate. It is a joint mission with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. The primary instruments for measuring precipitation are the Precipitation Radar (PR), the TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI), and the Visible and Infrared Scanner (VIRS). Additionally, TRMM will carry the Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS) and the Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) instrument. These instruments can all function individually or in combination with one another. TRMM is part of NASA's long-term, coordinated research effort to study the Earth as a global system.

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Curator: Harold.F.Pierce@nasa.gov
NASA Official: Dr Scott A. Braun
Last Updated: Wednesday June 29, 2011

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