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510 lines
28 KiB
=== PAGE 1 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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1
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Non-Stationary Corona around Multi-Point System in
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Atmospheric Electric Field:
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Discharge Current and Vertical Electric Field Profile
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Eduard M. Bazelyan1, Yuri P. Raizer2, Nickolay L. Aleksandrov1,*
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1. Krzhizhanovsky Power Engineering Institute, Moscow, Russia
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2. Institute for Problems in Mechanics, Moscow, Russia
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3. Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny, Moscow region, Russia
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ABSTRACT: The properties of a non-stationary glow corona maintained near the tips of a multi-point
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ground system in a time-varying thundercloud electric field have been studied numerically. The discharge
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was simulated from a system of identical vertical conductive electrodes that is a model of the earth’s
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surface extremities coronating under a thundercloud. The effect of system geometry and dimensions on
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the discharge properties and on vertical electric field profile above the coronating system was investigated.
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Conditions were determined under which the corona properties of a multi-point system are similar to the
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properties of a plane surface that emits ions into the atmosphere. The obtained results were used to
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estimate the temporal evolution of corona current density and corona space charge emitted during
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thunderstorms from the earth’s surface covered with dense vegetation.
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INTRODUCTION
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Corona discharges developed from the earth’s surface extremities (the tips of trees, bushes, leaves,
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grass and other sharp objects) under a thundercloud leads to the space charge injection into the atmosphere
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and make a contribution to the global electric circle. In addition, the corona space charge layer affects the
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local electric field at ground level and is practically important for lightning protection.
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Laboratory studies of a corona discharge cannot be directly extended to thunderstorm conditions
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because a discharge occurring near grounded objects in a time-varying atmospheric electric field is
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non-stationary and the corona current depends on the manner in which the ambient field evolves in time,
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rather than on its instantaneous values. The reason is that, in this case, the space charge front has no time to
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bridge the gap and to reach the thundercloud, whereas the corona space charge reaches usually the opposite
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electrode on a laboratory scale.
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The properties of a corona discharge developed from a solitary grounded hemispherically-tipped rod in
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a thundercloud electric field was considered analytically and numerically [Bazelyan and Raizer 2000;
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Aleksandrov et al. 2001; Bazelyan et al. 2008] on the basis of a simple 1D approximation. It was shown that
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the corona current varies in time as icor (t) ~ t(3k-1)/2μ1/2, when the cloud electric field varies as E0(t) ~ tk, k > -1.
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Contact information: Nickolay L. Aleksandrov, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny, Moscow region,
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Russia, Email: nick_aleksandrov@mail.ru; nick_aleksandrov@hotmail.com
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=== PAGE 2 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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2
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Here, μ is the ion mobility. In this case, the discharge current is constant only when the electric field rises in
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time. In a steady electric field (k = 0), the current decreases with time. The effect of ion mobility on the
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current is smaller than this effect for laboratory gaps when icor (t) ~ μ.
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Recent time-consuming numerical 2D simulations for a solitary grounded rod [Becerra 2013] and for a
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long horizontal grounded wire [Mokrov et al. 2013] supported the use of a much simpler 1D calculations for
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a qualitative analysis when the focus is on the processes in the vicinity of the coronating surface or when
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computational time is limited. This simplification is especially important when considering the properties of
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a corona developed from a grounded multi-point system with a complicated geometry.
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In a thundercloud electric field, the corona current even from an extremely high solitary electrode does
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not exceed 1 mA that is not important from the standpoint of the global electric circuit. Multi-point ground
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coronating systems (forest, bushes, grass and urban areas) make much larger contribution to the total current
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from the earth’s surface. In this case, the local electric field near a given coronating point is affected not only
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by the space charges developed from this point, but by the space charges emitted by others corona sources as
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well. Numerical simulation of a corona discharge from a multipoint system is much more complicated than
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that from a solitary electrode since it is necessary to consider interaction between coronating points and
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individual corona space charge layers.
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In this work, we extended the 1D approach developed in [Bazelyan and Raizer 2000; Aleksandrov
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et al. 2001; Bazelyan et al. 2008] for a solitary grounded electrode to a multi-electrode system. The
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properties of a non-stationary (transient) corona initiated and developed from a model multi-point ground
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system in a thundercloud electric field were numerically studied for different geometrical parameters of
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the system (see also [Bazelyan et al. 2014a]). A simplified method to determine the corona current density
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and injected corona space charge under real conditions was suggested. The evolution in time of vertical
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electric field profiles in the space charge layer above a multi-point system was also considered (see also
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[Bazelyan et al. 2014b]).
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CORONA INITIATION FROM MULTI-POINT SYSTEM IN EXTERNAL ELECTRIC FIELD
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In this work, the model of a corona discharge around a solitary electrode (see [Bazelyan and Raizer
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2000; Aleksandrov et al. 2001; Bazelyan et al. 2008]) was generalized to study the discharge from a
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multi-point system. We considered a system of vertical grounded hemispherically-tipped electrodes under
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practically important conditions when the electrode height h is much higher than the curvature radius of
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the electrode top, r0, and the distance between adjacent electrodes, D, is comparable with h. Electrodes
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were uniformly distributed over concentric circles with the radii rk = kD (k = 1,2…) around a given
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electrode (see figure 1). It was assumed that 6k electrodes are located on the k-th circle and that the total
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number of electrodes is such large that almost every coronating point is surrounded by numerous similar
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points. This allowed calculation of discharge properties only for the central electrode under the
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assumption that the discharge properties for other electrodes are similar. (Here, the peculiarities of the
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corona discharge near the electrodes at the outer boundary of the system were neglected.)
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The same approximation was used to calculate the corona onset atmospheric electric field, E0cor, at
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which the local electric field near the electrode tips reaches the corona onset field, Ecor, and corona is
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ignited. The value of Ecor was determined from the empirical formula suggested by Bazelyan et al. (2007).
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=== PAGE 3 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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3
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Fig. 1. The distribution of electrodes over the ground surface.
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A quantitative relation between E0cor and Ecor for a given multi-electrode system can be calculated
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using available electrostatic numerical methods. Figure 2 shows the threshold atmospheric electric field
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E0cor calculated with the charge simulation method [Malik 1989] for a system of grounded spherical
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electrodes as a function of the number of circles with surrounding electrodes. The value of E0cor increases
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with the number of surrounding electrodes and is affected even by electrodes located at a distance of 100
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m. This is explained by the fact that the number of surrounding electrodes distributed over a given circle
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increases with the circle radius; that is, the distant circles contain much more surrounding electrodes and
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each of these electrodes makes a contribution into the potential of the central electrode. The value of E0cor
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even for the multipoint system with closely packed electrodes (D/h =0.1) is only double that E0cor for a
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solitary electrode (N = 0).
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Fig. 2. The threshold ambient electric field required for corona initiation in a multi-point system as a
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function of the number of circles with surrounding electrodes. The calculation was made for h = 10 m, D =
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1m and r0 = 1 cm.
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=== PAGE 4 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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4
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CALCULATED MODEL OF CORONA DISCHARGE
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A physical approach to simulating a non-stationary, streamer-free, glow corona of positive polarity
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initiated from grounded electrodes in an atmospheric electric field and algorithms applicable to the
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simplest electrode geometries has been given in detail elsewhere [Aleksandrov et al. 2002]. In this model,
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the ionization layer in the immediate vicinity of the electrode tip was not considered because its thickness
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is much smaller than the radius of curvature of the tip. Here, the corona-producing surface was assumed to
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be an emitter of ions and the boundary condition for electric field was reduced to a condition widely used
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to determine the current-voltage characteristic of a stationary glow corona in long gas gaps [Raizer 1991],
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namely, that electric field at a coronating surface is equal to the onset corona field, Ecor. For a
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hemispherically-tipped rod with radius r0, the boundary condition was reduced to
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E(r0) = Ecor. (1)
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For the sake of definiteness, we assumed that an external electric field was produced by a
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time-varying thundercloud negative charge. The expansion of the corona space charge layers was
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described by the electrostatic equation for electric field
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div E(r) = /0 (2)
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and continuity equations for ions
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j
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j
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j
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j
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S
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E
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n
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div
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t
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n
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, (3)
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where = enj is the space charge density, e is the charge of a singly charged ion, nj and j are the number
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density and mobility of ions of species j, respectively, and Sj is a source term describing ion-molecule
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reactions that affect the ion composition and, hence, the ion transport. The potential introduced as E =
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- was assumed to tend to zero at the grounded plane and at grounded electrodes, whereas, away from
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them and from the ion “cloud”, the electric field tended to the undisturbed external electric field, E0(t).
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Electric field above every coronating electrode was calculated taking into account not only the corona
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space charge emitted by this electrode, but the charges emitted by other electrodes as well. The effect of
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these charges was considered approximately, assuming that they are point charges.
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NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF CORONA CURRENT AND INJECTED SPACE CHARGE
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Our numerical simulation showed the following peculiarities of a corona discharge from a multi-point
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system.
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Corona current decreases with increasing the number of coronating sources (see figure 3), whereas the
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rate of decrease of the corona current at E0 = const increases in this case. The temporal evolution of the
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corona current, icor(t), is easy to analyze in figure 4 where the values are normalized to the peak corona
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currents, imax.
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In a multi-point system with a few thousand of electrodes, where the corona current is stabilized in a
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linearly rising thundercloud electric field, the value of the stabilized current, icor max is almost independent
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of the electrode height (see figure 5) and depends strongly on the distance between electrodes, D (see
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figure 6). It follows from the data that icor max ~ D2.
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=== PAGE 5 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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5
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Fig. 3. The evolution in time of the corona current from the top of the central electrode in a multi-rod
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system with rods for h = D = 1 m and r0 = 10-1 cm. The external electric field rises linearly from zero to
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E0m at t < tm and is equal to E0m at t > tm, where E0m = 40 kV m-1 and tm = 1 s.
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Fig. 4. The evolution in time of the corona current from the top of the central electrode in a multi-rod
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system with rods for h = D = 10 m and r0 = 1 cm. The external electric field rises linearly from zero to E0m
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at t < tm and is equal to E0m at t > tm, where E0m = 20 kV m-1 and tm = 10 s.
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=== PAGE 6 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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6
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Fig. 5. The evolution in time of the corona current from the top of the central rod in a multi-point
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system with rods of height h = 10 and 50 m. The number of circles with surrounding rods is N = 50. Other
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conditions are similar to those in figure 4.
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Fig. 6. The value of the stabilized corona current from the top of the central rod in a multi-point system
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with rods of height h = 10 m as a function of the distance between electrodes. The number of circles with
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surrounding rods is N = 50. The external electric field rises linearly from zero to 40 kV m-1 for 30 s.
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=== PAGE 7 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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7
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The time it takes to saturate the corona current for a multi-point system in a linearly rising external
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electric field also depends on the distance between electrodes; this dependence is close to a linear one (see
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figure 7).
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Fig. 7. The time it takes to saturate the corona current for a multi-point system in a linearly rising
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external electric field as a function of the distance between electrodes. Conditions are similar to those in
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figure 6.
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Analysis of our calculations shows that the properties of a multi-point coronating system
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asymptotically tend to those of a prefect emitting plane with the surface electric field that is equal to the
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corona onset atmospheric electric field Е0cor [Bazelyan et al. 2008]. Stabilization of the surface electric
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field is due to ion emission. Indeed, the plane space charge layer and its image in the conducting ground
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form a double electrostatic layer; that is, the electric field is equal to E0(t) at the upper boundary of the
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layer and to E0cor at the ground surface. In this case, it follows from the Poisson equation (the Gauss
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theorem) that, to stabilize the surface electric field at the level E0cor, the corona space charge injected into
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the atmosphere per unit area must be [Bazelyan et al. 2008]
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]
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)
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(
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[
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)
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(
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cor
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E
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t
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E
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t
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q
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0
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0
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0
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. (4)
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Then, the corona current density is expressed as
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dt
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t
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dE
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dt
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dq
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t
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jcor
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)
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(
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)
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(
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0
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0
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0
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. (5)
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It follows from (5) that in the asymptotic limit the corona current density depends only on the rate of rise
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of the external electric field, E0(t). In particular, the current must be constant for a linearly rising electric
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field and must tend to zero for a constant electric field. It is precisely this manner of the temporal
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=== PAGE 8 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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8
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evolution of the corona current is obtained from our calculations for multi-point systems when the number
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of coronating electrodes is sufficiently large. The current through one electrode in multi-point systems
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studied is obtained by taking the product of jcor and the area per one electrode in the system, S = D2N2/nel,
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where N is the number of circles covered with electrodes and nel is the total number of electrodes in the
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system. Then, we have
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dt
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t
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dE
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n
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N
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D
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t
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j
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n
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N
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D
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t
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i
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el
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cor
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el
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cor
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)
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(
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)
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(
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)
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(
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0
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2
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2
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0
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2
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2
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. (6)
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From (6), icor max ~ D2, in agreement with our calculations (see figure 6). Moreover, there is good
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quantitative agreement between equation (6) and our calculated results. For instance, it follows from the
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results shown in figure 6 that icor max = 5.04 μA for the system with D = 20 m, whereas the current obtained
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from (6) under the same conditions is 4.85 μA. Here, the difference is less than 5%.
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The calculated corona current actively increases in time due to the development of individual
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corona space charges from their sources until a united corona space charge layer is formed. In the end,
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individual space charges unite into one plane corona space charge layer (see figure 8) and then the model
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of emitting plane (equations (4) and (5)) becomes adequate.
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Fig. 8. A schematic diagram of the space charge layer formed above a ground multi-points system in an
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atmospheric electric field E0.
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According to our calculations, the duration of the phase of active current growth in a multi-point
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system corresponds to the time it takes for the fronts of the individual space charge “clouds” to develop
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from the coronating sources until the formation of a united space charge layer. This time can be estimated
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as the time when the radius of the front of an individual space charge “cloud”, Rf, reaches D/2 (see figure
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9).
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=== PAGE 9 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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9
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Fig. 9. The evolution in time of the radius of the front of an individual space charge “cloud”
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developed from a central electrode in a multi-point system with D = 20 m. Conditions are similar to those
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in figure 6.
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It may be concluded that, to calculate the corona current emitted from a unit area of the ground
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surface during thunderstorms, there is no need to consider geometry of coronating extremities on the
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ground surface. With a good accuracy, current density could be estimated from the rate of rise of an
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undisturbed thundercloud electric field using equation (5). The corona space charge emitted from a unit
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area of the ground surface can be estimated in a similar way. From (4), this charge depends on the
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geometry properties of a coronation system only indirectly, via the corona onset atmospheric electric field,
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E0cor. Under most practically important thunderstorm conditions, we have E0 >> E0cor. In this case, the
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value of q turns out to be independent of the system parameters and is equal to
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qmax ε0E0max , (7)
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where E0max is the peak thunderstorm electric field. For instance, we have qmax 0.53 μC m-2 for E0max = 60 kV
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m-1 [Soula and Chauzy 1991].
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ELECTRIC FIELD PROFILES ABOVE MULTI-POINT CORONATING SYSTEM
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Our calculations showed that corona properties for a multi-point system are controlled by an
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undisturbed thundercloud electric field, E0(t). Its direct measurement is not easy to make because of the
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effect of corona space charge layer. The local electric field near coronating sources is stabilized at the
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level of the corona onset electric field. Electric field in the corona space charge layer is lower than E0 due
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to this charge and, only outside of the layer (outside of the double electrostatic plane layer), a
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thundercloud electric field is not disturbed.
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=== PAGE 10 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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10
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In an 1D approximation, electric field profiles above an emitting plane can be exactly found from
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equations (2) and (3) in an analytical way [Bazelyan et al. 2014b]. Figure 10 shows the temporal evolution
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of the electric field at different altitudes in this case when the thundercloud electric field rises linearly up
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to 60 kV m-1 for 30 s and then is kept constant. Electric field at any altitude is equal to the thundercloud
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electric field until the front of the space charge layer reaches this altitude. Then, the local electric field,
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E(t), is stabilized. Stabilization is obtained only for a linearly rising thundercloud field, E0(t) ~ t. In the
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general case the local electric field inside the corona space charge layer increases in time for d2E0/dt2 > 0
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and decreases in time at d2E0/dt2 < 0. This means that a sensor, being placed inside the corona space
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charge layer, registers a local electric filed that not only can differ quantitatively from the undisturbed
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thundercloud electric field, but can have even opposite temporal tendency as well. This is demonstrated in
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figure 11 that shows the temporal evolution of the electric field at different altitudes above an emitting
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plane when the thundercloud electric field E0(t) rises in time in a relaxation manner,
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/
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max
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)
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(
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t
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e
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E
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t
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E
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1
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0
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0
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. (8)
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Here, we have d2E0/dt2 < 0 and the local electric field inside the space charge layer decreases in time
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although dE0/dt > 0.
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Fig. 10. The evolution in time of the electric field at different altitudes above an emitting plane at Е0cor
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=1.65 kV m-1. The dashed curve corresponds to the thundercloud electric field that rises linearly in time up
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to E0 max = 60 kV m-1 for tm = 30 s and then is kept constant.
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=== PAGE 11 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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11
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Fig. 11. The evolution in time of the electric field at different altitudes above an emitting plane at Е0cor
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=1.65 kV m-1. The dashed curve corresponds to the thundercloud electric field that varies as (8) at E0 max =
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60 kV m-1 and τ = 10 s. The arrows indicate the instants at which the top boundary of the space charge
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layer reaches given altitudes.
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Fig. 12. The evolution in time of the electric field at different altitudes above the central rod in a
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multi-point system with rods of height h = 10 m and radius r0 = 2 cm. The distance between rods is D = 10
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m. The number of circles with surrounding rods is N = 100. The altitude is reckoned from the ground. The
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dashed curve corresponds to the thundercloud electric field that rises linearly in time up to E0 max = 60 kV
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m-1 for tm = 30 s and then is kept constant. The arrows indicate the instants at which the top boundary of
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the space charge layer reaches given altitudes.
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=== PAGE 12 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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Stabilization of the thundercloud electric field at t > tm leads to a collapse of the corona current. In this
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case, the corona space charge layer ascends and expands because the top front of the layer moves with a
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velocity vf = E0max, whereas the velocity of the bottom boundary of the layer is lower, vb = E0cor.
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The total electric field behind the top front of the layer decreases in time and tends to E0cor, the electric
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field at the bottom boundary of the layer.
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Figure 12 shows the temporal evolution of the electric field inside the space charge layer above a
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model multi-point coronating system. The distance between the rods in the system was equal to the rod
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height. Similarity between the data in figures 12 and 10 is close. In both cases, the total electric field E(t)
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(i) is close to the undisturbed thundercloud electric field, E0(t), at altitudes above the space charge front,
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(ii) is stabilized (although with some delay) inside the space charge layer at E0 = At and (iii) sharply
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decreases at E0 = const. Our calculations show that the vertical electric field profile above a multi-point
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coronating system tends to the electric field profile above a plane surface emitting ions as the number of
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electrodes in the system increases.
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CONCLUSIONS
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The developed computer model allows quantitative estimation of the properties of a non-stationary
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glow corona in the system of grounded hemispherically-tipped electrodes in a thundercloud electric field
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E0. The properties of the multi-point coronating system asymptotically tend to those of a prefect emitting
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plane with the surface electric field that is equal to the corona onset atmospheric electric field Е0cor. The
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field Е0cor is controlled by the dimensions of the individual electrodes and by the distance between them. It
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is shown that the model of an emitting plane is valid when the individual space charge layers from
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different coronating points reach each other and form a unite plane layer. The time it takes for the
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formation of the united layer depends on the distance between coronating electrodes.
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In the asymptotic approximation, the corona current density is equal to ε0dE0/dt. In this case, the
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current through each coronating point is independent of the dimensions of the electrodes and depends only
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|
on the distance between them. The total corona space charge injected into the atmosphere per unit area of
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a multi-point system tends asymptotically to the expression q = 0(E0 - E0cor) and depends on the
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geometrical parameters of the electrodes only indirectly, through the corona onset atmospheric electric
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|
field E0cor. Under practically important thunderstorm conditions, it is generally follows from field
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|
observations that E0 >> E0cor. In this case, the value of q turns out to be independent of the system
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|
parameters.
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The vertical electric field profile above a multi-point coronating system tends to the electric field
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|
profile above a plane emitting surface as the number of electrodes in the system increases. As a result, the
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electric field distribution tends to be independent of the height of coronating points, whereas the spacing
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|
between the electrodes affects only the time it takes to stabilize the electric field profile.
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Electric field at a given altitude above the ground coronating surface in a thundercloud electric field is
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equal to this field until the space charge layer reaches this altitude. The evolution in time of the electric
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|
field E measured in the space charge layer depends on the rate of change of the thundercloud electric field
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|
Е0. The field E (i) undergoes a stabilization when the value of Е0 rises linearly in time, (ii) increases in
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time at d2E0/dt2 > 0 and decreases in time at d2E0/dt2 < 0. Consequently, simultaneous measurements of
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=== PAGE 13 ===
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XV International Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
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13
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electric field at various levels could produce not only various results, but radically different evolutions in
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time as well.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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This work was partially supported by the Russian Ministry of Education and Science under the program
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“5Top100”.
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REFERENCES
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