Premium
A Satellite‐Detected Terrestrial Gamma Ray Flash Produced by a Cloud‐to‐Ground Lightning Leader
Author(s) -
Pu Yunjiao,
Cummer Steven A.,
Huang Anjing,
Briggs Michael,
Mailyan Bagrat,
Lesage Stephen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2020gl089427
Subject(s) - physics , lightning (connector) , flash (photography) , satellite , gamma ray , fermi gamma ray space telescope , luminosity , astrophysics , astronomy , optics , power (physics) , quantum mechanics , galaxy
We report measurements of a terrestrial gamma ray flash (TGF) detected by the Fermi Gamma‐ray Burst Monitor that was produced during a negative cloud‐to‐ground (CG) lightning leader. This is the first report of a downward directed TGF occurring during a CG flash but detected by a space‐based instrument. The gamma ray photons are produced 3 ms preceding a return stroke ( − 146 kA) and are essentially simultaneous with an isolated low frequency radio pulse. Based on timing, the pulse is estimated to initiate at approximately 6 km altitude, and its polarity indicates downward moving negative charge, the opposite of regular satellite‐detected upward TGFs. A likely scenario is that the runaway electrons accelerate into the upper, positively charged end of the leader in a high field region, with the reverse positron beam generating upward gamma rays detectable from space. A search for similar waveform features indicates that this type of downward CG‐TGF may occur prior to 1% of high peak current CG strokes. Extrapolating gives a global rate of 5–10% of previously known TGFs and potentially a significant fraction of global TGFs.