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Ultra-Sensitive Broadband Remote Sensing Instrument for Longwave Radio Reception
  • Baris Volkan Gurses,
  • Kevin Thomas Whitmore,
  • Morris Cohen
Baris Volkan Gurses
Georgia Institute of Technology Main Campus

Corresponding Author:barisvolkangurses@gatech.edu

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Kevin Thomas Whitmore
Georgia Institute of Technology Main Campus
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Morris Cohen
Georgia Institute of Technology Main Campus
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Abstract

Lightning and transient luminous events (TLEs) emit a short burst (~1 ms) of broadband electromagnetic waves, whose frequencies can range from a few Hz to the optical band, but the bulk of their energy is radiated as longwaves (<500 kHz). These longwave radio signals are named radio atmospherics, or colloquially sferics. Due to their low frequency, sferics can propagate in the Earth-ionosphere waveguide at global distances with relatively low attenuation (~3 dB per 1000 km). This allows a sparse network of longwave receiver stations, placed hundreds of kilometers apart, to geolocate lightning strikes at a global scale. Hardware performance of the receivers at these stations significantly impacts the data quality and determines the detection efficiency and location accuracy of the lightning detection network. In this work, we present a low-frequency remote sensing instrument for lightning geolocation in the form of an ultra-sensitive broadband electric field receiver. It is capable of detecting extremely weak sferics, enabled by its ideal sensitivity of 1 nV/(m√Hz), or 0.003 fT/√Hz. We present this receiver’s antenna-amplifier co-design and the design considerations to achieve this low sensitivity. We then report its performance characteristics, validated both theoretically and empirically. Finally, we present some of the novel applications of this device in the scope of lightning geolocation and remote sensing.