Fermi Improves its Vision for Thunderstorm Gamma-Ray Flashes

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Dec. 06, 2012

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington           
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Lynn Chandler 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-2806 
lynn.chandler-1@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 12-424

FERMI IMPROVES ITS VISION FOR THUNDERSTORM GAMMA-RAY FLASHES



WASHINGTON -- Thanks to improved data analysis techniques and a new 
operating mode, the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) aboard NASA's Fermi 
Gamma-ray Space Telescope is now 10 times better at catching the 
brief outbursts of high-energy light mysteriously produced above 
thunderstorms. 

The outbursts, known as terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs), last 
only a few thousandths of a second, but their gamma rays rank among 
the highest-energy light that naturally occurs on Earth. The enhanced 
GBM discovery rate helped scientists show most TGFs also generate a 
strong burst of radio waves, a finding that will change how 
scientists study this poorly understood phenomenon. 

Before being upgraded, the GBM could capture only TGFs that were 
bright enough to trigger the instrument's on-board system, which 
meant many weaker events were missed. 

"In mid-2010, we began testing a mode where the GBM directly downloads 
full-resolution gamma-ray data even when there is no on-board 
trigger, and this allowed us to locate many faint TGFs we had been 
missing," said lead researcher Valerie Connaughton, a member of the 
GBM team at the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH). She 
presented the findings Wednesday in an invited talk at the American 
Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco. A paper detailing the 
results is accepted for publication in the Journal of Geophysical 
Research: Space Physics. 

The results were so spectacular that on Nov. 26 the team uploaded new 
flight software to operate the GBM in this mode continuously, rather 
than in selected parts of Fermi's orbit. 

Connaughton's team gathered GBM data for 601 TGFs from August 2008 to 
August 2011, with most of the events, 409 in all, discovered through 
the new techniques. The scientists then compared the gamma-ray data 
to radio emissions over the same period. 

Lightning emits a broad range of very low frequency (VLF) radio waves, 
often heard as pop-and-crackle static when listening to AM radio. The 
World Wide Lightning Location Network (WWLLN), a research 
collaboration operated by the University of Washington in Seattle, 
routinely detects these radio signals and uses them to pinpoint the 
location of lightning discharges anywhere on the globe to within 
about 12 miles (20 km). 

Scientists have known for a long time TGFs were linked to strong VLF 
bursts, but they interpreted these signals as originating from 
lightning strokes somehow associated with the gamma-ray emission. 

"Instead, we've found when a strong radio burst occurs almost 
simultaneously with a TGF, the radio emission is coming from the TGF 
itself," said co-author Michael Briggs, a member of the GBM team. 

The researchers identified much weaker radio bursts that occur up to 
several thousandths of a second before or after a TGF. They interpret 
these signals as intracloud lightning strokes related to, but not 
created by, the gamma-ray flash. 

Scientists suspect TGFs arise from the strong electric fields near the 
tops of thunderstorms. Under certain conditions, the field becomes 
strong enough that it drives a high-speed upward avalanche of 
electrons, which give off gamma rays when they are deflected by air 
molecules. 

"What's new here is that the same electron avalanche likely 
responsible for the gamma-ray emission also produces the VLF radio 
bursts, and this gives us a new window into understanding this 
phenomenon," said Joseph Dwyer, a physics professor at the Florida 
Institute of Technology in Melbourne, Fla., and a member of the study 
team. 

Because the WWLLN radio positions are far more precise than those 
based on Fermi's orbit, scientists will develop a much clearer 
picture of where TGFs occur and perhaps which types of thunderstorms 
tend to produce them. 

The GBM scientists predict the new operating mode and analysis 
techniques will allow them to catch about 850 TGFs each year. While 
this is a great improvement, it remains a small fraction of the 
roughly 1,100 TGFs that fire up each day somewhere on Earth, 
according to the team's latest estimates. 

Likewise, TGFs detectable by the GBM represent just a small fraction 
of intracloud lightning, with about 2,000 cloud-to-cloud lightning 
strokes for every TGF. 

The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is an astrophysics and particle 
physics partnership and is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Greenbelt, Md. Fermi was developed in collaboration with 
the U.S. Department of Energy, with important contributions from 
academic institutions and partners in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, 
Sweden and the United States. 

The GBM Instrument Operations Center is located at the National Space 
Science Technology Center in Huntsville, Ala. The GBM team includes a 
collaboration of scientists from UAH, NASA's Marshall Space Flight 
Center in Huntsville, the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial 
Physics in Germany and other institutions. 

For images and video related to this story, please visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/TCzfMB 

For more information about NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, 
visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/fermi 

	
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