Open Access
Open access
Geophysical Research Letters, volume 51, issue 17

Evidence of a New Population of Weak Terrestrial Gamma‐Ray Flashes Observed From Aircraft Altitude

I Bjørge Engeland 1
N. Østgaard 1
David Sarria 1
M. Marisaldi 1
A. Mezentsev 1
Anders Nødland Fuglestad 1
N. Lehtinen 1
J. E. Grove 2
Daniel Shy 2
Timothy H. Lang 3
M Quick 3
H. Christian 4
Chris Schultz 3
Richard J. Blakeslee 3
Ian Stuart Adams 5
R. Kroodsma 5
Gerald Heymsfield 5
Kjetil Ullaland 1
S. Yang 1
B. Hasan Qureshi 1
J. Søndergaard 1
B. Husa 1
T Daniel Walker 4
Monte Bateman 4
D. Mach 6
Phillip Bitzer 4
Martin Fullekrug 7
Morris B Cohen 8
MARK STANLEY 9
Steven A. Cummer 10
J. Montanya 11
Marni Pazos 12
C Velosa 13
Oscar van der Velde 11
Yunjiao Pu 10
Paul R. Krehbiel 9
J A Roncancio 11
Jesus López 11
Michele Urbani 11
A. Santos 13
T. Neubert 14
F.J Gordillo-Vázquez 15
Show full list: 42 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-09-07
scimago Q1
SJR1.850
CiteScore9.0
Impact factor4.6
ISSN00948276, 19448007
Abstract

Terrestrial Gamma‐ray Flashes (TGFs) are ten‐to‐hundreds of microsecond bursts of gamma‐rays produced when electrons in strong electric fields in thunderclouds are accelerated to relativistic energies. Space instruments have observed TGFs with source photon brightness down to ∼1017–1016. Based on space and aircraft observations, TGFs have been considered rare phenomena produced in association with very few lightning discharges. Space observations associated with lightning ground observations in the radio band have indicated that there exists a population of dimmer TGFs. Here we show observations of TGFs from aircraft altitude that were not detected by a space instrument viewing the same area. The TGFs were found through Monte Carlo modeling to be associated with 1015–1012 photons at source, which is several orders of magnitude below what can be seen from space. Our results suggest that there exists a significant population of TGFs that are too weak to be observed from space.

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