可能引起野火的雷击探测和识别方法

Gavin Strelec, A. Kunneke, Frans Jooste
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摘要

闪电和野火是非洲南部次大陆普遍存在的自然现象。当地特有的植被在这些火灾中幸存下来。在过去,闪电是引发火灾最常见的原因,但目前在被占领地区,人为原因占了大多数火灾的原因。尽管如此,闪电仍然至关重要,因为在偏远和无人居住的地方,火灾大多是由闪电引起的。这些火灾具有重大的生态和社会经济影响,因为此类火灾通常在后期被发现。由于地形崎岖,不易接近,这些火灾难以扑灭,导致大面积燃烧。探测、定位和预测可能引发火灾的雷击,对保护生命、财产和生态敏感地区非常重要。最近的各种案例研究说明了这一过程。特别值得关注的是由闪电点燃的阴燃地下火灾,这些火灾可能在引发事件后几天甚至几周发生火灾。已经设计出了探测和扑灭这些火灾的方法。90%以上的火灾都是由正极的电击引起的。相反,大约90%的云对地冲程是负极性,因此正冲程是检测过程的重点,并导致相对较小的分析集。雷击数据可以与植被水化水平的卫星检测相结合,以客观地量化野火的风险。这项研究的目的是提供雷击的早期检测和定位,这些雷击与引起野火的高概率有关。在这里,以有限的数据作为讨论文件介绍了该技术,并在正在进行的进一步工作中使用额外的数据进行开发和验证。
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Method for detection and identification of lightning strokes likely to cause wildfires
Lightning and wildfires are natural phenomena prevalent in the Southern African sub-continent. The endemic vegetation evolved to survive these fires. In the past, lightning was the most common trigger of fires, but currently anthropogenic causes account for most fires in occupied areas. Despite this, lightning remains critical, as fires in remote and uninhabited locations are mostly initiated by lightning. These fires have both a significant ecological and socioeconomic impact, as such fires are typically detected at an advanced stage. These fires are difficult to extinguish due to rugged terrain and low accessibility, resulting in large burnt areas. The detection, location and prediction of lightning strokes that are probable to ignite fires is important to protect lives, property as well as ecologically sensitive areas. This process is illustrated by various recent case studies. Of particular concern are smouldering underground fires that are ignited by lightning and may result in fires that occur days, or even weeks later after the initiation event. Methods for detecting and extinguishing these fires have been devised. More than 90% of fires, are started by strokes of positive polarity. Conversely, around 90% of cloud-to-ground strokes are of negative polarity, therefore positive strokes are the focus of the detection process and result in a relatively small analysis set. Lightning stoke data can be combined with satellite detection of vegetation hydration levels to objectively quantify the risk of wildfires. The aim of this research is to provide early detection and location of lightning strokes that are associated with a high probability of causing wildfires. Here, the technique is introduced with limited data as a discussion paper and is being developed and verified with additional data in ongoing further work.
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