Definition
Naturally occurring electrical fields in the atmosphere caused by the separation and accumulation of electric charge between regions of the air, between clouds, or between clouds and the ground. These fields can interact with an aircraft in flight, influencing how charge builds up on the airframe and how it discharges.
Plain English
Invisible electrical zones in the air, created when parts of the atmosphere carry different amounts of electrical charge. An aircraft flying through one of these zones can pick up or shed charge as it passes through.
Context Anchor
Seen in precipitation static discussions, where the handbook explains how an aircraft can collect electrical charge while flying in certain weather.
Derivation
Atmospheric is from Greek atmos (vapor) and sphaira (sphere) -- the layer of air around the Earth. Electric is from Greek elektron (amber), the material the ancients rubbed to produce static charge. Field here means a region of space where an electrical force acts. Together: a region of electrical force within the air around us.
Why Pilots Care
These fields produce static buildup that creates radio noise, corona discharge, and potential navigation errors if left unaddressed.
Grounding Statement
Picture the air around a thunderstorm as carrying invisible patches of positive and negative charge -- an aircraft flying through that air interacts with those charges the same way a balloon picks up static when rubbed against a sweater.
Intuition Check
Do not think of “fields” as open land or a marked area on a chart. Here, a field is an invisible area where electrical force can act.
Example Sentence 1
Flying near the developing thunderstorm, the crew noticed radio static increasing as the aircraft entered stronger atmospheric electric fields.
Example Sentence 2
Precipitation static increased as the aircraft entered a region of stronger atmospheric electric fields ahead of a frontal line.