Scientists Reveal Where Deadly Lightning Strikes Most in The US

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lightning strikes compilation One lightning flash with five strokes that hit the ground in at least four locations. Photo created by stacking stills from a video provided by Brendon Melander, a Wyoming storm chaser. (Brendon Melander)

It's been a warm day, maybe even a little humid, and the tall clouds in the distance remind you of cauliflower. You hear a sharp crack, like the sound of a batter hitting a home run, or a low rumble reminiscent of a truck driving down the highway. A distant thunderstorm, alive with lightning, is making itself known.

Lightning flashes in thunderstorms at least 60 times per second somewhere around the planet, sometimes even near the North Pole.

Each giant spark of electricity travels through the atmosphere at 200,000 miles per hour. It is hotter than the surface of the Sun and delivers thousands of times more electricity than the power outlet that charges your smartphone. That's why lightning is so dangerous.

Lightning kills or injures about 250,000 people around the world every year, most frequently in developing countries, where many people work outside without lightning-safe shelters nearby.

In the United States, an average of 28 people were killed by lightning every year between 2006 and 2023. Each year, insurance pays about US$1 billion in claims for lightning damage, and around 4 million acres of land burn in lightning-caused wildfires.

lightning strike density map

Yet, estimates of US lightning strikes have varied widely, from about 25 million a year, a number meteorologists have cited since the 1990s, to 40 million a year, reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That complicates lightning safety and protection efforts.

I'm a meteorologist whose research focuses on understanding lightning behavior. In a new study, my colleagues and I used six years of data from a national lightning detection network that we believe has become precise enough to offer a more accurate picture of lightning strikes across the US. That knowledge is essential for improving forecasts and damage prevention.

How much lightning strikes the US

To get a clearer picture of how often lightning strikes, it helps to define what a lightning strike is.

Imagine looking out a window at a thunderstorm with cloud-to-ground lightning nearby. The lightning appears to flicker.

A lightning flash and is all the cloud-to-ground lightning that occurs within 1 second and a 6-mile radius. Each flicker is a lightning stroke. Each stroke can hit one or more ground strike points, and there can be multiple strokes in the same channel.

Lightning is a large electrical discharge trying to dissipate the electricity in a cloud, so if there is a lot of electricity built up, there can be a lot of lightning to get rid of it all.

Over six years of data from the National Lightning Detection Network, we found that the US averages 23.4 million flashes, 55.5 million strokes and 36.8 million ground strike points each year.

Where lightning strikes most often

The basic ingredients for thunderstorms are warm and moist air near the ground with cooler, drier air above it and a way to lift the warm moist air. Anywhere those ingredients are present, lightning can occur.

This happens most frequently near the Gulf Coast, where the sea breeze helps trigger thunderstorms most days in the summer. Florida in particular is a hot spot for cloud-to-ground lightning strikes. The Miami-Fort Lauderdale area alone had over 120,000 lightning strokes in 2023.

A map shows the most activity in the Gulf Coast states, lessening moving north and westward.Frequency of lightning ground strikes per year, averaged over six years, shows the most activity along the Gulf Coast. (Vagasky, et al, 2024)

The Central and Southern US aren't quite as lightning prone, but they tend to have more thunderstorms and lightning strikes than the North and West of the country, though lightning in the West can be especially destructive when it sparks wildfires.

The cool waters of the Pacific Ocean, meanwhile, tend to mean few thunderstorms along the West Coast.

Counting lightning strikes

To be able to count how much lightning is hitting the ground and where it is doing so, you have to be able to detect it. Luckily, cloud-to-ground lightning is fairly easy to detect – in fact, you may have done it.

When lightning flashes, it acts like a giant radio antenna that sends electromagnetic waves – radio waves – around the world at the speed of light. If you have an AM radio station on during a thunderstorm, you may hear a lot of static.

The National Lightning Detection Network uses strategically placed antennas to listen for these radio waves produced by lightning. It's now able to locate at least 97 percent of the cloud-to-ground lightning that occurs across the US.

A map shows the most activity in the Gulf Coast states, lessening over the Great Plains while still high in the mountains.The average number of cloud-to-ground lightning strike points per flash across the United States between 2017 and 2022. (Vagasky, et al, 2024)

The number of lightning strikes varies year to year depending on the prevailing weather patterns during the spring and summer months, when lightning is most common.

There isn't enough accurate US data yet to say whether there is a trend toward more or less lightning. However, changes in lightning frequency and location can be an indicator of climate change affecting storms and precipitation, which is why the World Meteorological Organization designated lightning as an "essential climate variable."

Better data can boost safety

Meteorologists and emergency management teams can use this new data and our analysis to better understand how lightning typically affects their regions. That can help them better forecast risks and prepare the public for thunderstorm hazards. Engineers are also using these results to create better lightning protection standards to keep people and property safe.

Lightning strikes are still unpredictable. So, to stay safe, remember: When thunder roars, go indoors.The Conversation

Chris Vagasky, Meteorologist, University of Wisconsin-Madison

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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