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Asymmetric Backward Peaking Radiation Pattern From a Relativistic Particle Accelerated by Lightning Leader Tip Electric Field
Author(s) -
Yücemöz Mert,
Füllekrug Martin
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2020jd033204
Subject(s) - bremsstrahlung , physics , particle acceleration , particle radiation , radiation , electric field , poynting vector , cyclotron radiation , electromagnetic radiation , computational physics , perpendicular , particle detector , cyclotron , charged particle , optics , acceleration , nuclear physics , photon , magnetic field , electron , classical mechanics , geometry , ion , mathematics , quantum mechanics
Terrestrial Gamma ray Flashes exhibit slopes of ionizing radiation associated with bremsstrahlung. Bremsstrahlung has a continuous spectrum of radiation from radio waves to ionizing radiation. The Poynting vector of the emitted radiation, that is, the radiation pattern around a single particle under the external lightning electric field during interaction with other particles or atoms, is not quite well known. The overall radiation pattern arises from the combination of radiation of parallel and perpendicular motions of a particle caused by the acceleration from the lightning electric field and the bremsstrahlung. The calculations and displays of radiation patterns are generally limited to a low‐frequency approximation for radio waves and separate parallel and perpendicular motions. Here, we report the radiation patterns of combined parallel and perpendicular motions from accelerated relativistic particles at low and high frequencies of the bremsstrahlung process with an external lightning electric field. The primary outcome is that radiation patterns have four relative maxima with two forward peaking and two backward peaking lobes. The asymmetry of the radiation pattern, that is, the different intensities of forward and backward peaking lobes, are caused by the Doppler effect. A novel outcome is that bremsstrahlung has an asymmetry of the four maxima around the velocity vector caused by the curvature of the particle's trajectory as it emits radiation. This mathematical modeling helps to better understand the physical processes of a single particle's radiation pattern, which might assist the interpretation of observations with networks of radio receivers and arrays of γ ‐ray detectors.

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