VLF RADIO SIGNAL PROPAGATION UNDER SEVERE STORMY WEATHER CONDITIONS
Aleksandra Kolarski
Publication
BOOK OF ABSTRACTS AND CONTRIBUTED PAPERS: Building bridges between climate science and society through a transdisciplinary network, Page 85-86, https://doi.org/10.69646/bbbs2412
BOOK OF ABSTRACTS AND CONTRIBUTED PAPERS: Building bridges between climate science and society through a transdisciplinary network, September 10-14, 2024, Kopaonik Mt, Serbia, Edited by Vladimir A. Srećković, Aleksandra Kolarski, Filip Arnaut and Milica Langović
Published: 24. 11. 2024.
Abstract
Due to the ongoing climate change, extreme weather events globally came to attention primarily since their more frequent occurrence, especially during the last decade. Severe stormy weather conditions and interrelated electrification processes in storm-bearing clouds are well known to get into relation with Earth’s ionosphere through a global electric circuit, forming in lithosphere-atmosphere-ionosphere coupling processes. Very Low Frequency (VLF, 3-30 kHz) radio- propagation, taking place within the Earth-ionosphere waveguide, is strongly under the influence of such conditions. Atmospheric electric discharges and related transient luminous events, common for severe stormy weather, through electric processes cause abrupt and intense changes in electrical properties of their surroundings. VLF signals, propagating sub- ionospherically, are strongly influenced by these regions of changed electric properties and undergo perturbations of distinct features, which can be used for studying related processes and phenomena, through a remote sensing approach. Characteristic perturbations observed on monitored VLF signals transmitted from USA, UK, Germany, Italy and France and registered in Belgrade, Serbia, related to stormy weatherconditions in region over Balkan Peninsula during the last decade, were examined, with main findings presented in this research.