Researchers armed with more than 100 scientific instruments will spend the summer probing nighttime thunderstorms on the Great Plains
This summer, more than 20 NOAA scientists will stay up late to learn why some thunderstorms form and grow at night, without the energy from the sun's heat. They will be participating in the Plains Elevated Convection At Night (PECAN), a large, intensive field campaign to collect data before and during nighttime thunderstorms in the western Great Plains from June 1 to July 15.

Lightning strikes the United States about 25 million times a year. (Image credit: Paulina Cwik/NOAA)