Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres, volume 123, issue 20

Characterizing Upward Lightning With and Without a Terrestrial Gamma Ray Flash

D. M. Smith 1
G.S. Bowers 2
Gregory H. Bowers 2
M. Kamogawa 3
Daohong Wang 4
T. USHIO 5
Tomoo Ushio 5
John Ortberg 1
J T Dwyer 6
M. Stock 7
M S Stock 7
Show full list: 11 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2018-09-25
scimago Q1
SJR1.710
CiteScore7.3
Impact factor3.8
ISSN2169897X, 21698996
Space and Planetary Science
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
Atmospheric Science
Geophysics
Abstract
We compare two observations of gamma-rays before, during, and after lightning flashes initiated by upward leaders from a tower during low-altitude winter thunderstorms on the western coast of Honshu, Japan. While the two leaders appear similar, one produced a terrestrial gamma-ray flash (TGF) so bright that it paralyzed the gamma-ray detectors while it was occurring, and could be observed only via the weaker flux of neutrons created in its wake, while the other produced no detectable TGF gamma-rays at all. The ratio between the indirectly derived gamma-ray fluence for the TGF and the 95% confidence gamma-ray upper limit for the gamma-ray quiet flash is a factor of $1\times10^7$. With the only two observations of this type providing such dramatically different results -- a TGF probably as bright as those seen from space and a powerful upper limit -- we recognize that weak, sub-luminous TGFs in this situation are probably not common, and we quantify this conclusion. While the gamma-ray quiet flash appeared to have a faster leader and more powerful initial continuous current pulse than the flash that produced a TGF, the TGF-producing flash occurred during a weak gamma-ray "glow", while the gamma-ray quiet flash did not, implying a higher electric field aloft when the TGF was produced. We suggest that the field in the high-field region approached by a leader may be more important for whether a TGF is produced than the characteristics of the leader itself.
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