1. Introduction
Radio signals below 300 kHz have been successfully employed for the transmission of, e.g., time/frequency standards and military/naval wireless communication with submerged objects. Such signals usually rely on large ground-based antennas with numerous supporting structures, which still have low emission efficiency and high operational costs due to the kilometric/myriametric wavelengths. An emerging solution to these issues is the employment of long, fully airborne (unanchored), vertical antennas, lifted up by aerostats, as shown in
Figure 1. This type of antenna also allows placing the transmitter closer to the center of the earth-layer D waveguide of the ionosphere [
1,
2], giving potentially higher achievable signal ranges while maintaining the vertical polarization of the antenna wire, allowing it to excite stronger electric fields in comparison with aircraft-trailed antennas [
3]. As they ascend to their target altitude, devices of this vertical type—which consist of very long (hundreds of meters long) objects classified as ‘floating earth conductors’ [
4]—interact intensely with the surrounding atmosphere layers and the objects within them (clouds, mists), posing additional risks to their structures and transmitters. These interactions manifest themselves directly in the form of the changes in the electric field in the environment around the floating conductor, the differentiation of electric charges between the conductor and its surroundings. and the formation of electric discharges in the form of corona and bidirectional discharges [
4,
5]. These phenomena can be recorded by numerous methods and devices, but some of them—e.g., the measurements of the electric field strength around the conductor/inside the cloud with spherical probes [
6]—do not yield undistorted results due to the self-charging of the measuring instruments' structures [
7]. Data obtained indirectly, i.e., using methods typical for remote sensing in the form of specific radio signatures of specific electrical phenomena [
8], allow for an approximate description of the observed phenomena, providing key information both from the perspective of the transmitting antenna (electrical charging speed, possible transmitter overload due to current and voltage pulses, protection against flashovers on the antenna’s elements) and the environment (determining the electrical structure of clouds, loss or acquisition of electric charge).
This paper discusses the issue of protection of the fully airborne antenna’s elements from two factors:
Flashovers—voltage discharges over insulating elements (from the electrified antenna wire to the upper elements of the flight train supporting the wire) under various electric fields inside the basic types of clouds, which determine the voltage safety margin for the transmitter’s operation;
The issue of actual corona discharges appearing on the fully airborne antenna wire in relation to the actual external electric fields strength inside the cloud.
An attempt is presented to determine the structure of the electric field of a mature storm cloud on the basis of the obtained radio data on phenomena occurring around a long airborne antenna, which is a problem opposite to electrical analyses determining the design requirements for airborne VLF radio transmitters [
9]. The presented model can be used as a verification method for both the proposed theoretical wire electrification processes and the computer simulations, based on numerical solutions of differential equations of individual electrical mechanisms, which require supplementation with real-environment mechanisms (and their orders of magnitude) occurring inside storm clouds [
10]. Such mechanisms are difficult to define due to the physical conditions inside the clouds (high intensity of electric fields, potentially destructive discharges, charging of the entire structure of devices instead of dedicated measuring electrodes, etc.).
2. Antenna Electrification vs. Insulator Flashover Voltage
The fully airborne, vertical, wire antenna, lifted up by an aerostat, is attached to its flight train (the setup consisting of the parachute, all the tethers, the main gondola, and the payload) by either an insulating tether or an insulating rod. This component has a mushroom-like shield affixed to its upper part in order to reduce the electric field intensity in its proximity, as well as to mechanically protect the attachment point of the wire antenna to the flight train from getting hit by upper flight train components during the re-entry and landing phases of the mission. The design of the insulator and its mushroom-like cap is derived from the original designs tested for use in terrestrial very low frequency (VLF) antenna systems, which defined the flashover voltages for VLF for different insulator lengths, insulator surfaces, and humidity values [
11]. For airborne and high-altitude (stratospheric, i.e., >12 km of altitude) conditions, a crucial factor determining the flashover voltage value, apart from the factors mentioned previously, is the atmospheric pressure; the discharge/flashover voltage decreases with this parameter, according to the Paschen’s law [
12]. Therefore, it is possible to experience corona and flashovers for significantly lower voltages during such flight, which potentially endangers sensitive electronic elements and mechanical components, such as the tethers and the antenna insulator.
The flashover voltage changes in altitude for different environmental conditions—using experimental pressure and temperature data, including a self-heating case, due to the absorption of solar radiation—have been largely described in [
13]. This resulted in plots showing the changes of flashover voltage values for two months of the year (collected experimental atmospheric data for December and April) for two main cases: dry and humid. As the electrification processes occur mainly inside the humid environment of the clouds [
9], the calculated humid cases can be employed to demonstrate the voltage safety margin for a fully airborne VLF antenna ascending through different kinds of clouds, namely by comparing the total voltage induced on the antenna of given length to the flashover voltage for the given environmental conditions.
The values of the induced electric field strengths for different kinds of clouds have been taken from [
9] and recalculated into voltage by multiplying them with the value of the insulator gap of 0.6 m from the cases of humid flashovers from [
13].
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4 and
Figure 5 show the comparison of the flashover voltages (upper curves) with the induced voltages on the ascending antenna (lower curves) for the Stratocumulus and Nimbostratus clouds for two wire lengths: 140 m (2022 experiments) and 500 m, for comparative purposes. The ‘positive polarization’ of the cloud indicates that its upper charge is positive and the lower charge negative; the ‘negative polarization’ indicates the opposite charge allocation [
7]. The Nimbostratus cloud data have their locations of origin indicated (Sankt Petersburg, Kyiv, and Tashkent). An analogue comparison can be made for the mission’s descent, where the antenna acquires electric charge up to the touchdown, as shown in
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8 and
Figure 9, also for antenna lengths of 140 m and 500 m. ‘KULLA 3’ denotes the cases where the antenna material absorbs the solar radiation and heats itself up (experiments executed in April, approx. twice the temperature values from the colder case). The blue curves, showing the flashover voltage changes with altitude for the December atmospheric data, begin with an offset in values due to the data registration start at the altitude of 65 m.
Table 1 shows the minimum obtainable peak voltage margins, read from the calculated electrification (i.e., the antenna’s electrical charging in flight) vs. flashover voltage cases. The values decrease with the antenna’s length (more precisely, with the logarithm of the length [
9]) and present the smallest margins for the worst electrification cases, the Nimbostratus (layered storm-type) clouds. For the Stratocumulus (layered heap-type) clouds, the smallest margins are reached to the positively polarized (charged + in the upper part and − in the lower part) cloud cases.
3. Antenna’s Actual Corona Recalculation into Electric Field Structure
The most intense electrification processes, resulting in the smallest margin for the antenna’s peak transmitting voltage, appear for the Nimbostratus cloud cases, with the Tashkent case producing the strongest induced electric field around the antenna wire. Due to the heterogeneity of the insides of the cloud, the electric field in microscopic proximity to the antenna may reach the values at which the corona is induced, regardless of the calculated flashover voltage due to Paschen’s law. This is consistent with past experiments, which indicated the existence of corona on free-floating conductor-type antennas [
14] and anchored very long antennas, operating at VLF frequency range [
5]. The elicitation of corona is facilitated with the increase of the electric charge, proportional to the antenna’s dimensions and the cloud type. Therefore, for fixed cloud type, antenna geometry, and analytically known mechanism of electrification, the estimation of the natural electric field values and structure changes with altitude can be estimated, if data on experimental corona discharges are collected.
The corona discharges—recorded as voltage/current signals—have the form of impulse-like signals, appearing in repetitive intervals, depending on the magnitude of the electric charge transferred and the form of the conductors on which the corona is incepted [
15]. Popular methods for indirect (i.e., with no electrical/galvanic connection between the recording circuit and the element-incepting corona) registration of this phenomena include the recording of its radio signatures, usually with bandwidth reaching tens of kHz [
8]. In 2015, a 225 kHz AM radio receiver was placed in the middle of a fully airborne, 200 m-long, stratospheric balloon antenna, but did not deliver any useful data due to an internal malfunction [
16]. A similar experiment was performed in 2021, with the radio receiver operating at 144 kHz AM (below the broadcasting part of the low-frequency spectrum), which delivered recorded acoustic signals associated with the corona impulses appearing on the 140 m-long antenna wire passing through a Nimbostratus cloud in a warm storm front [
17]. The recorded impulses did not appear before the launch of the antenna (when the receiver was positioned on the ground), nor when the mission entered the Altostratus layer of the storm front, leaving the storm cloud below.
Every corona impulse transfers a given amount of electric charge [
18]. Assuming that the electric field strength at which the corona impulse is triggered (
Egr.) is set at the tropospheric value of 2.7 kV/m often employed in engineering calculations [
19], the amount of electric charge transferred per impulse is indicated by the electric field strength after the impulse. The higher this value is, the lower the electric charge transferred. As the data delivered in the 140 m-long antenna experiment was present in the form of normalized (between 0 and 1) amplitude values in time [
9], the electric field strength after the subsequent corona impulses can be described as
Egr.Ai, where Ai is the impulse amplitude recorded in the experiment.
Figure 9 describes the electric field strength function in time
E(t) for subsequent corona impulses (at the time moments
ti and
ti+1). The electrification mechanisms inside a storm cloud, investigated experimentally, allow the increase in the electric field strength after a discharge back to the values preceding the discharge in a few seconds only [
7]. For the corona, the impulses—functioning as minor discharges—appear in short intervals between each other, such that the increase of the electric field strength in time between them would take the practical form of linear functions (as in
Figure 10).
Between the subsequent corona discharges for
ti and
ti+1, the electric field resulting from this linear charging process (
Echarging) can be described as [
16]:
As this increase of the electric field strength around the antenna wire (length 2
c = 140 m and thickness
b = 10
−4 m) is caused by the electrification mechanism inside a storm cloud with the charging velocity
vC = 0.3 nC/m
3/s, the electrification function described in [
9] can be applied for the same time interval:
where
t [s] is the time variable (to be calculated from a known ascent velocity and given altitude data),
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of the medium,
Eext. [V/m] is the external (primordial) electric field inside the cloud,
r [m] is the distance between the cloud and the wire (assumed as an averaged value of 1 m due to the lack of a pair of solid electrodes), and
a [m] is the product of a square root of a sum of cubes of
r and
c.
As Equation (2) was formulated for a case where the electric charge does not leave the antenna due to the corona discharges [
9], the model (1) expands this case towards the conditions where the corona appears when traversing the cloud. If Equations (1) and (2) are compared to each other, the calculation of
Eext. is possible [
16], with the additional parameters
fG and
fC introduced to simplify the final expression:
where
Wk is the Lambert W function calculated for the
k = 0 branch (as the values of the function’s argument are the small and negative, <<−1).
Figure 11 and
Figure 12 present the calculated
Eext. values for the time values 0.5(
ti+1 −
ti), ascent velocity of 3 m/s, and 2 altitude (
ALT) ranges of the balloon mission, where the corona discharges have been recorded inside the Nimbostratus cloud. The functions appear as highly oscillating due to the fact that the electric field strength inside the cloud is highly influenced by a slow-moving, large metallic object (the antenna), while the cloud tends to keep its electrical equilibrium; the electric field strength rises rapidly after each discharge [
7,
9]. Above 1500 m, the frequency of appearance of the corona discharges decreased due to the lower electric field values inside the cloud.
Figure 13 shows the comparison of the calculated external electric field strength with older experimental data from three locations (Sankt Petersburg, Kyiv, and Tashkent) [
7], aligned to the comparable altitudes (the 2020 Nimbostratus case began at lower altitudes). The calculated
Eext. function can be approximated by a 4th degree polynomial to estimate the electric field strength without the disturbing metallic object; the maximum values reached exceed 1300 V/m, situating the function in the middle of the older experimental electric field strength ranges.
4. Discussion
In the general approach, the VLF transmitting systems operating in the range of kW require high voltages in their antenna circuits [
20]. To minimize the risk of corona during the ascent phase of such fully airborne transmitting systems, the chosen peak antenna voltage must fit within the ranges indicated in
Table 1. The worst cases determined in this analysis indicate that the minimum available transmitter peak voltage (voltage margin) appears for 500 m-long radiators at storm conditions and reach 12.4 kV, a value that decreases with the logarithm of the antenna’s length, as with the antenna’s length, the induced electric field strength increases towards the values at which the flashovers appear. The smallest peak voltage margin for the storm clouds appeared, however, for a single location (Tashkent), with the Kyiv and Sankt Petersburg locations presenting significantly higher voltage margins. The calculated external electric field strength for the 2020 experiment, plotted in
Figure 12, shows that these values are positioned between the Tashkent and Kyiv locations, which would result in peak voltage margins comparable to those calculated for the Tashkent case (<15 kV). Naturally, from the perspective of flight organization and flight mechanics, the storm cloud flight case bears the most difficulties and risks, and a launch in these conditions should be avoided if possible.
The descents of the fully airborne antennas (under a parachute) present very high peak voltage margins for the Stratocumulus clouds (>85 kV), which offer a high level of safety and a possible increase of transmitter power. For the Nimbostratus cases, the minimal voltage margin (found for the Tashkent case) decreases to a value slightly above 50 kV for the 500 m-long antenna. The margins, similar to the ascent cases, decrease with the increasing length of the antennas due to the intensifying electrification processes. From the perspective of flight planning and execution, the descent phases are characterized by a moderate controllability of the flight train (i.e., the flight train—the antenna, the gondola etc.—may not be able to avoid entering a storm cloud when descending under a parachute). Therefore, for this flight stage, higher available voltage margins increase the corona safety level for a transmitter operating at higher powers.
The calculation of the external electric field strength from the experimental corona discharges’ data has delivered results in agreement with older experimental data (the dataset for each location is an average over multiple cases—10 to 72 for the Stratocumulus and 7 to 18 for the Nimbostratus [
7]). This shows the correct approach to the constructed analytical models. Therefore, in the overall investigation of the electrification of fully airborne balloon antennas, the proposed model of the electric field’s increase between the subsequent corona discharges can be used with the electrification model as a way of incorporating the electric charge loss due to corona discharges.