Hours per day with thunder, from lightning mapping
What it measures. Counts how many hours each day thunder could likely be heard at a given spot, based on detected lightning. A 'thunder hour' is a simple, intuitive measure of how often thunderstorms happen.
How it's made. Calculated from lightning detected by the GLM optical lightning sensors aboard NOAA's GOES weather satellites, combined into an hourly product from 2019 onward.
How & where you'd use it. Gives a consistent long-term way to track lightning and thunderstorm trends across the Americas and nearby oceans, useful for weather and climate studies.
What's measured
Coverage & cadence
- Time span2019-01-01 → 2025-12-31
- Measured byGOES-16 (GLM) · GOES-17 (GLM) · GOES-18 (GLM) · GOES-19 (GLM)
- Processing levelLevel 3
- Spatial extent-180, -90, 180, 90
- FormatsnetCDF-4
- StatusCOMPLETE
What you can do with it
- Map air pollutants — NO₂, aerosols, ozone
- Track greenhouse gases and Earth's energy budget
- Feed weather and air-quality analysis
Official description
The Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) is the first optical lightning detector in geostationary orbit, and GLM sensors operate aboard the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES R-series: GOES-16, -17, -18, and -19). The first to launch was GOES-16 on November 19, 2016, and it was placed in the GOES-East position. On March 1, 2018, GOES-17 launched and eventually became operational in the GOES-West position. Since that time, the United States has maintained one satellite in each position. Currently, GOES-18 (west) and GOES-19 (east) are the operational satellites. With these instruments, the combined hourly thunder hour dataset has been created. A thunder hour is an hour during which thunder can be heard at a given location. Thunder hours represent a historical measure of lightning occurrence and a metric of thunderstorm frequency that is comparatively less sensitive to geographic variations in the detection capabilities of a lightning location system. The GLM thunder hour dataset will provide a long-term means of tracking trends in lightning occurrence over the Americas and surrounding oceans. The GLM Combined Hourly Thunder Hour dataset is calculated from lightning detections from 1 January 2019 onward, during which time GLMs operated from GOES-West and GOES-East positions, providing continuous lightning detection for a broad region from the Aleutian Islands and New Zealand eastward to the western tip of Africa. The data are provided at 0.05° latitude/longitude resolution in netCDF-4 format.
Get the data
import earthaccess
earthaccess.login(strategy="netrc") # free Earthdata Login
results = earthaccess.search_data(
short_name="glmhth",
version="1",
bounding_box=(-122.5, 37.2, -121.8, 37.9), # your area (W,S,E,N)
temporal=("2024-01-01", "2024-12-31"), # your dates
)
files = earthaccess.open(results) # stream straight from GHRC_DAAC Browsing CMR needs no login. Downloading or streaming bytes needs a free Earthdata Login + the earthaccess package. Official links
- GLM Combined Hourly Thunder Hour User's Guide VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- README: GLM Thunder Hour Data VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Files may be downloaded directly to your workstation from this link GET DATA
- Thunder Hours: How Old Methods Offer New Insights into Thunderstorm Climatology VIEW RELATED INFORMATION