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Abstract Positive lightning discharges to ground (+CGs) are relatively rare and considerably less studied than negative ones (-CGs). We present observations of unusual transient phenomena occurring in +CGs and discuss their mechanisms. One of them is a brief electric coupling to a concurrent -CG initiated from a 257-m tall tower located 11 km from the +CG channel. A transient process (stroke) in the -CG flash appears to cause a transient luminosity enhancement (M-component) in the +CG channel. In the course of these essentially simultaneous transients, positive charge is in effect taken from the ground at the position of the tower and injected into the ground at the position of the +CG channel. Recoil leaders reactivating decayed +CG branches near the cloud base are each observed to cause a transient luminosity decrease (dip), as opposed to the expected luminosity increase, in the +CG main channel.
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Abstract High‐speed video records of a single‐stroke positive cloud‐to‐ground (+CG) flash were used to examine the evolution of eight needles developing more or less radially from the +CG channel. All these eight needles occurred during the later return‐stroke stage and the following continuing current stage. Six needles, after their initial extension from the lateral surface of the parent channel core, elongated via bidirectional recoil events, which are responsible for flickering, and two of them evolved into negative stepped leaders. For the latter two, the mean extension speed decreased from 5.3 × 106to 3.4 × 105and then to 1.3 × 105 m/s during the initial, recoil‐event, and stepping stages, respectively. The initial needle extension ranged from 70 to 320 m (
N = 8), extension via recoil events from 50 to 210 m (N = 6), and extension via stepping from 810 to 1,870 m (N = 2). Compared with needles developing from leader channels, the different behavior of needle flickering, the longer length, the faster extension speed, and the higher flickering rate observed in this work may be attributed to a considerably higher current (rate of charge supply) during the return‐stroke and early continuing‐current stages of +CG flashes.