Astonishing Extreme Lightning Bolt Recorded

From the “we still don’t know everything about weather and climate” department and Arizona State University:

It was a single lightning flash that streaked across the Great Plains for 515 miles, from eastern Texas nearly all the way to Kansas City, setting a new world record.

“We call it megaflash lightning and we’re just now figuring out the mechanics of how and why it occurs,” said Randy Cerveny, an Arizona State University President’s Professor in the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning.

Cerveny and colleagues used space-based instruments to measure the megaflash, which took place during a major thunderstorm in October 2017. Its astonishing horizontal reach surpasses by 38 miles the previous record of 477 miles recorded during an April 2020 storm in the southern U.S. The new record-setter went unnoticed until a re-examination of satellite observations from the 2017 storm.

“It is likely that even greater extremes still exist, and that we will be able to observe them as additional high-quality lightning measurements accumulate over time,” said Cerveny, who serves as rapporteur of weather and climate extremes for the World Meteorological Organization, the weather agency of the United Nations.

For years, lightning detection and measurement relied on ground-based networks of antennas that detect the radio signals emitted by lightning and then estimate location and travel speed based on the time it takes signals to reach other antenna stations in the network.

Satellite-borne lightning detectors in orbit since 2017 have made it possible to continuously detect lightning and measure it accurately at continental-scale distances.

“Our weather satellites carry very exacting lightning detection equipment that we can use document to the millisecond when a lightning flash starts and how far it travels,” Cerveny said.

Parked in geostationary orbit, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency’s GOES-16 satellite detects around one million lightning flashes per day. It is the first of four NOAA satellites equipped with geostationary lightning mappers, joined by similar satellites launched by Europe and China.

GOES-16 satellite image recording a record-setting 515-mile lightning mega-flash during a storm in October 2017. Red circles mark positively charged branches of the lightning, and blue circles mark negatively charged branches. Credit: World Meteorological Organization, American Meteorological Society

“Adding continuous measurements from geostationary orbit was a major advance,” said Michael Peterson at the Georgia Tech Research Institute. “We are now at a point where most of the global megaflash hotspots are covered by a geostationary satellite, and data processing techniques have improved to properly represent flashes in the vast quantity of observational data at all scales.” Peterson is first author of a report in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society documenting the new lightning record.

Most lightning flashes are limited to less than 10 miles in reach. When a lightning bolt reaches beyond 60 miles (100 kilometers to be exact), it’s considered a megaflash. Less than 1 percent of thunderstorms produce megaflash lightning, according to satellite observations analyzed by Peterson. They arise from storms that are long-lived, typically brewing for 14 hours or more, and massive in size, covering an area comparable in square miles to the state of New Jersey. The average megaflash shoots off five to seven ground-striking branches from its horizontal path across the sky.

While megaflashes that extend hundreds of miles are rare, it’s not at all unusual for lightning to strike 10 or 15 miles from its storm-cloud origin, Cerveny said. And that adds to the danger. Cerveny said people don’t realize how far lightning can reach from its parent thunderstorm.

Lightning kills 20 to 30 people each year in the U.S. and injures hundreds more. Most lightning strike injuries occur before and after the thunderstorm has peaked, not at the height of the storm.

“That’s why you should wait at least a half an hour after a thunderstorm passes before you go out and resume normal activities,” Cerveny said. “The storm that produces a lightning strike doesn’t have to be over the top of you.”


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Sweet Old Bob
August 6, 2025 3:22 pm

“That’s why you should wait at least a half an hour after a thunderstorm passes before you go out and resume normal activities,” Cerveny said. “The storm that produces a lightning strike doesn’t have to be over the top of you.”

The sky might fall !

😉

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Sweet Old Bob
August 7, 2025 6:51 am

Launch operations are suspended and the vehicle secured when thunderstorm activity is detected 20 miles away.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 7, 2025 9:30 am

The golf match blows stops play when lightning is 5 miles away. I wonder if this will change anything.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  mkelly
August 7, 2025 12:22 pm

I learned playing golf with my father, also an EE, that clearing out early was a good plan. Metal golf club shafts make excellent lightning rods.

If they wish to ensure all people are safe, they will address this.

Sweet Old Bob
Reply to  Sweet Old Bob
August 7, 2025 3:55 pm

Grew up on farm in ks.(flint hills)
Had livestock, as did neighbors . Were in pasture or corral year round .
Don’t remember any losses due to lightening.

This seems like overuse of precautionary principle.

Or just fearmongering.

John Hultquist
August 6, 2025 3:36 pm

When a big storm is “over the top of you” the sound and fury is impressive.
Been there, done that, got the T-shirt.

David Goeden
Reply to  John Hultquist
August 6, 2025 5:08 pm

I grew up with an Ash tree in the yard that was almost as easy to climb as a ladder. When a storm blew in, I would climb up to the top crotch of the central leader and hang on while the wind blew and the sky darkened. When the rain started, Mom would call me down. The emerald ash bore killed my tree about ten years ago.

John Hultquist
August 6, 2025 3:36 pm

When a big storm is “over the top of you” the sound and fury is impressive.
Been there, done that, got the T-shirt.

August 6, 2025 4:23 pm

The concentration of CH4 in dry air is 1.926 ppmv (cf, NOAA’S GBL). One cubic meter of air contains a mere 1.4 milligrams of CH4. The reason the concentration of CH4 in the air is so low is due the initiation of its combustion by discharges of lightning, Mother Nature’s sparkplug. Everyday there are several million discharges of lightning, especially in the tropics. Discharges of lightning also produces ozone which would also oxidize CH4.

Other organic compounds oxidized due lightning discharges are the hydrocarbons in gasoline and diesel vapors displaced into the air when fuel tanks are filled. Other major sources of CH4 are sanitary land fills, sewage plants, rice paddies, wild and domestic animals, seeps from wetlands and the oceans, decaying vegetation, and coal mining.

Oil and natural gas operations release methane and the companies under pressure reduce to reduce emissions of CH4 because of the claims that it causes global warming. There is too little CH4 in the air to global warming.

The bottom line is why don’t have to worry about CH4.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Harold Pierce
August 6, 2025 5:00 pm

“The bottom line is why don’t have to worry about CH4.”

& we also don’t have to worry about … CO2, sea level rise, global warming, the polar bears, penguins, peak oil, the ozone hole, extinction & a plethora of crises devised by non-critical thinkers.

My worry is, we won’t have anything else to worry about.
Therefore, we will start questioning why we are so compliant in letting our ‘glorious leaders’ continuously shaft us.

Reply to  1saveenergy
August 6, 2025 8:11 pm

Like Trump: We are being overrun by alien invaders. We are being ripped off by all the countries. I’m going to fight back with tariffs.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  1saveenergy
August 7, 2025 6:53 am

It is deflection and distraction to focus our attention on the political elite getting rich at our expense.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 7, 2025 10:01 am

typo: to focus our attention away from the political elite

Chasmsteed
Reply to  Harold Pierce
August 7, 2025 3:36 am

Lightning also produces Nitric acid { HNO3 } ±5-10 million tonnes PA which has a Ka equivalent (dissociation constant) rating of 2.4 x 10^1 which is equivalent to 11-22 billion tonnes of CO2 or approximately 1-2 times man’s production of CO2 as far as ocean acidification is concerned.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_dissociation_constant

/s-on Doesn’t anybody care ? /s-off

Bob
August 6, 2025 4:59 pm

This is interesting but does knowing how far lightning travels serve some purpose or is it just interesting info to add to our stock of knowledge?

Reply to  Bob
August 7, 2025 7:51 am

re: “how far lightning travels”

Realistically, it is ALL dependent on where the “stepped leader” terminates, and, the stepped leader is looking for termination in a positive ‘streamer’ generally forming from an object on the ground (cloud to ground lightning) … intracloud would be similar; a stepped leader comprised of negative charge (electron surplus developed via charge separation mechanisms in the clouds) ‘looking for’ / in search of ‘termination’ in an opposite (electron deficit) charge pocket or volume.

“Lightning in Super Slow Motion”
Researcher documents stepped leaders

Erik Magnuson
Reply to  Bob
August 7, 2025 12:11 pm

Lightning strikes cause a lot of damage along with deaths and injuries. The more we know about how lightning works, the better we can protect against it.

Walter Sobchak
August 6, 2025 5:53 pm

When we were at the local swimming pool last weekend. They made everyone get out of the pool and move to the upper deck because there was lightning within 10 miles. We wondered about the logic of that. The article about the mega flash in the local newspaper explianed it..

“While megaflashes that extend hundreds of miles are rare, it’s not at all unusual for lightning to strike 10 or 15 miles from its storm-cloud origin … ‘That’s why you should wait at least a half an hour after a thunderstorm passes before you go out and resume normal activities,’ Cerveny said. … Lyons said that if lightning is within six miles – as detected with reliable lightning data – people should go to a lightning-safe building or vehicle. “World record lightning flash detected from 2017” by Doyle Rice Usa Today Columbus Dispatch P.5A 5 Aug 2025

August 6, 2025 6:05 pm

I think it’s really cool that the composite products from geostationary satellite sensing can show us this stuff in relatively high resolution and near-real time.

https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/conus_band.php?sat=G19&band=EXTENT3&length=24

Oh, and all these thunderstorms and lightning flashes do not exist, of course, within the time-step-iterated, pre-stabilized, large-grid, discrete-layer, parameter-tuned “climate” models.

Randle Dewees
August 6, 2025 6:34 pm

I have a bit of first hand experience with lightening. My little sister at age 3 got some hair burn off her scalp while sleeping in our Ozark hilltop farmhouse, Didn’t seem to hurt her. It did blow a hole in the roof.

I’ve had a couple frightening mountaineering episodes, one with deafening/blinding bolts right in front of us (my wife and I) as we crouched on a ledge, striking the cliff base a 1000′ down. I was sure that was the end. Another time with her high up we were immersed in the air buzzing and crackling for several minutes. Bolts were striking a peak about a mile away, the buzzing would stop at the stroke, then resume in 10 or so seconds.

And one day I was at some white sand beach near Tampa Bay. I was floating on the warm water as I watched a miniature dark cloud form about a mile out. It suddenly started putting strokes onto the water. It really was pleasant off there, but I got out and went in the hotel as it seemed to be nudging closer.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Randle Dewees
August 7, 2025 6:56 am

Had a lightning strike within feet of my car during a blizzard.
It momentarily solved the white out problem, but left me with the after vision effect.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 7, 2025 8:43 am

Are you save in a car, what with the rubber tires, during a lightning storm?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 7, 2025 9:15 am

Have you ever chucked a pair of Ohmmeter probes into tire rubber?

Many moons ago a friend of my brother tried using a thick piece of tire ‘rubber’ to insulate his 11 meter metal antenna mount from his Jeep’s metalwork …it did NOT work.

The proof was in the SWR meter’s out-of-bounds reading, verified when we used a wood sawhorse to hold his antenna in the same location, sans the ‘tire rubber’ he thought was an insulator …

Reply to  _Jim
August 7, 2025 11:28 am

hmmm… so the rubber tire insulation from lightning is a myth- I bet most people believe in that myth- so even driving along in a storm can be dangerous? What about the danger to air traffic?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 7, 2025 11:44 am

Cars at 3:18 and 4:00 in this video:

https://youtu.be/kvEG0k4mrME?t=198

Aircraft at 7:35 and 8:06.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 8, 2025 10:16 am

Tires substantially reduce the probability, but it is still non-zero. Water plays a factor. Also, the lightning can follow the body of the car and jump the air gap to the ground, similar to cloud to ground.

There are cases of lightning penetration that has nothing to do with tire insolation. Stuff happens.

FYI, insolation is a definition of a high resistance. There are no perfect insulators. Also the SWR example is not the same energy or frequency content of lightning. Given how radar works, it is possible the tires did not conduct, but rather the RF penetrated. This is call skin depth.

There are examples of aircraft being hit by lightning.

The world is not safe a place, although way many people want absolute safety.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 7, 2025 10:02 am

From the discharge, yes, at least usually, although there are some mechanical circumstances that could result in a fire.

From the noise and bright flash, no, not safe.

August 6, 2025 9:48 pm

A series of simultaneous inter/intra-cloud ‘strikes’ triggered such as to create a seemingly longest bolt ever seen?

If the ‘Stepped Leader’ formation of lightning is understood, a bolt this long would be nae unto impossible ….

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  _Jim
August 7, 2025 6:57 am

What they cannot tell is if it is a contiguous series of smaller lighting flashes. The first triggers the second and so on.

No proof. Just speculation, but I have seen cloud to cloud and you could see the movement.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 7, 2025 7:32 am

Yes … just for completeness a slow-mo of stepped leader captured by researchers –

“Lightning in Super Slow Motion”
Researcher documents stepped leaders
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLWIBrweSU8

Also –

“All about lightning”
by Uman, Martin A
https://archive.org/details/allaboutlightnin0000uman

August 7, 2025 8:40 am

In ’74, I was boating in the Okefenokee with a buddy. Before we rented the metal fishing boat, I asked the ranger in the state park about the weather. He said “cloudy but it’s gonna clear”. So we headed out, on the Swanee River. When we got about as far as you can go before you’d get lost (maybe 10 miles) – a ferocious storm started with heavy rain blowing sideways and intense lightning. Meanwhile, the ‘gators were in the river and I suspect poison snakes. It took us hours to get back to where we rented the boats. All that time we saw lightning. We were terrified. It’s a miracle we got out alive. I kept thinking, “this is comparable to being in the WWI trenches under heavy artillery fire”. When we got back, I went looking for that ranger. Good for him that we didn’t find him.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 7, 2025 10:05 am

If you were not touching the water and did not get a direct hit, the boat would have worked as essentially a Faraday cage for any electricity in the water

Lots of assumptions, certainly, and I would never venture out if lightning was possible.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 7, 2025 11:29 am

The boat was half filled with water. Now of course I’d never think of doing that- like a lot other things I did back in those days. 🙂

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 7, 2025 12:24 pm

You were indeed lucky to get back alive.

JTraynor
August 9, 2025 3:01 pm

This is fascinating stuff. Nature has few bounds. Incredible.