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Gamma-ray Showers Observed at Ground Level in Coincidence With Downward Lightning Leaders

Authors :
Abbasi, R. U.
Abu-Zayyad, T.
Allen, M.
Barcikowski, E.
Belz, J. W.
Bergman, D. R.
Blake, S. A.
Byrne, M.
Cady, R.
Cheon, B. G.
Chiba, J.
Chikawa, M.
Fujii, T.
Fukushima, M.
Furlich, G.
Goto, T.
Hanlon, W.
Hayashi, Y.
Hayashida, N.
Hibino, K.
Honda, K.
Ikeda, D.
Inoue, N.
Ishii, T.
Ito, H.
Ivanov, D.
Jeong, S.
Jui, C. C. H.
Kadota, K.
Kakimoto, F.
Kalashev, O.
Kasahara, K.
Kawai, H.
Kawakami, S.
Kawata, K.
Kido, E.
Kim, H. B.
Kim, J. H.
Kishigami, S. S.
Krehbiel, P. R.
Kuzmin, V.
Kwon, Y. J.
Lan, J.
LeVon, R.
Lundquist, J. P.
Machida, K.
Martens, K.
Matuyama, T.
Matthews, J. N.
Minamino, M.
Mukai, K.
Myers, I.
Nagataki, S.
Nakamura, R.
Nakamura, T.
Nonaka, T.
Ogio, S.
Ohnishi, M.
Ohoka, H.
Oki, K.
Okuda, T.
Ono, M.
Onogi, R.
Oshima, A.
Ozawa, S.
Park, I. H.
Pshirkov, M. S.
Remington, J.
Rison, W.
Rodeheffer, D.
Rodriguez, D. C.
Rubtsov, G.
Ryu, D.
Sagawa, H.
Saito, K.
Sakaki, N.
Sakurai, N.
Seki, T.
Sekino, K.
Shah, P. D.
Shibata, F.
Shibata, T.
Shimodaira, H.
Shin, B. K.
Shin, H. S.
Smith, J. D.
Sokolsky, P.
Springer, R. W.
Stokes, B. T.
Stroman, T. A.
Takai, H.
Takeda, M.
Takeishi, R.
Taketa, A.
Takita, M.
Tameda, Y.
Tanaka, H.
Tanaka, K.
Tanaka, M.
Thomas, R. J.
Thomas, S. B.
Thomson, G. B.
Tinyakov, P.
Tkachev, I.
Tokuno, H.
Tomida, T.
Troitsky, S.
Tsunesada, Y.
Uchihori, Y.
Udo, S.
Urban, F.
Vasiloff, G.
Wong, T.
Yamamoto, M.
Yamane, R.
Yamaoka, H.
Yamazaki, K.
Yang, J.
Yashiro, K.
Yoneda, Y.
Yoshida, S.
Yoshii, H.
Zundel, Z.
Source :
J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 123 (2018)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Bursts of gamma ray showers have been observed in coincidence with downward propagating negative leaders in lightning flashes by the Telescope Array Surface Detector (TASD). The TASD is a 700~square kilometer cosmic ray observatory located in southwestern Utah, U.S.A. In data collected between 2014 and 2016, correlated observations showing the structure and temporal development of three shower-producing flashes were obtained with a 3D lightning mapping array, and electric field change measurements were obtained for an additional seven flashes, in both cases co-located with the TASD. National Lightning Detection Network (NLDN) information was also used throughout. The showers arrived in a sequence of 2--5 short-duration ($\le$10~$\mu$s) bursts over time intervals of several hundred microseconds, and originated at an altitude of $\simeq$3--5 kilometers above ground level during the first 1--2 ms of downward negative leader breakdown at the beginning of cloud-to-ground lightning flashes. The shower footprints, associated waveforms and the effect of atmospheric propagation indicate that the showers consist primarily of downward-beamed gamma radiation. This has been supported by GEANT simulation studies, which indicate primary source fluxes of $\simeq$$10^{12}$--$10^{14}$ photons for $16^{\circ}$ half-angle beams. We conclude that the showers are terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs), similar to those observed by satellites, but that the ground-based observations are more representative of the temporal source activity and are also more sensitive than satellite observations, which detect only the most powerful TGFs.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 123 (2018)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1705.06258
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2017JD027931