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Flickering gamma-ray flashes, the missing link between gamma glows and TGFs.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Østgaard, N; Mezentsev, A; Marisaldi, M; Grove, JE; Quick, M; Christian, H; Cummer, S; Pazos, M; Pu, Y; Stanley, M; Sarria, D; Lang, T ...
Published in: Nature
October 2024

Two different hard-radiation phenomena are known to originate from thunderclouds: terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs)1 and gamma-ray glows2. Both involve an avalanche of electrons accelerated to relativistic energies but are otherwise different. Glows are known to last for one to hundreds of seconds, have moderate intensities and originate from quasi-stationary thundercloud fields2-5. TGFs exhibit high intensities and have characteristic durations of tens to hundreds of microseconds6-9. TGFs often show a close association with an emission of strong radio signals10-17 and optical pulses18-21, which indicates the involvement of lightning leaders in their generation. Here we report unique observations of a different phenomenon, which we call flickering gamma-ray flashes (FGFs). FGFs resemble the usual multi-pulse TGFs22-24 but have more pulses and each pulse has a longer duration than ordinary TGFs. FGF durations span from 20 to 250 ms, which reaches the lower boundary of the gamma-ray glow duration. FGFs are radio and optically silent, which makes them distinct from normal TGFs. An FGF starts as an ordinary gamma-ray glow, then suddenly increases exponentially in intensity and turns into an unstable, 'flickering' mode with a sequence of pulses. FGFs could be the missing link between the gamma-ray glows and conventional TGFs, whose absence has been puzzling the atmospheric electricity community for two decades.

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Published In

Nature

DOI

EISSN

1476-4687

ISSN

0028-0836

Publication Date

October 2024

Volume

634

Issue

8032

Start / End Page

53 / 56

Related Subject Headings

  • General Science & Technology
 

Citation

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ICMJE
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Østgaard, N., Mezentsev, A., Marisaldi, M., Grove, J. E., Quick, M., Christian, H., … Mach, D. (2024). Flickering gamma-ray flashes, the missing link between gamma glows and TGFs. Nature, 634(8032), 53–56. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07893-0
Østgaard, N., A. Mezentsev, M. Marisaldi, J. E. Grove, M. Quick, H. Christian, S. Cummer, et al. “Flickering gamma-ray flashes, the missing link between gamma glows and TGFs.Nature 634, no. 8032 (October 2024): 53–56. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07893-0.
Østgaard N, Mezentsev A, Marisaldi M, Grove JE, Quick M, Christian H, et al. Flickering gamma-ray flashes, the missing link between gamma glows and TGFs. Nature. 2024 Oct;634(8032):53–6.
Østgaard, N., et al. “Flickering gamma-ray flashes, the missing link between gamma glows and TGFs.Nature, vol. 634, no. 8032, Oct. 2024, pp. 53–56. Epmc, doi:10.1038/s41586-024-07893-0.
Østgaard N, Mezentsev A, Marisaldi M, Grove JE, Quick M, Christian H, Cummer S, Pazos M, Pu Y, Stanley M, Sarria D, Lang T, Schultz C, Blakeslee R, Adams I, Kroodsma R, Heymsfield G, Lehtinen N, Ullaland K, Yang S, Qureshi BH, Søndergaard J, Husa B, Walker D, Shy D, Bateman M, Bitzer P, Fullekrug M, Cohen M, Montanya J, Younes C, van der Velde O, Krehbiel P, Roncancio JA, Lopez JA, Urbani M, Santos A, Mach D. Flickering gamma-ray flashes, the missing link between gamma glows and TGFs. Nature. 2024 Oct;634(8032):53–56.
Journal cover image

Published In

Nature

DOI

EISSN

1476-4687

ISSN

0028-0836

Publication Date

October 2024

Volume

634

Issue

8032

Start / End Page

53 / 56

Related Subject Headings

  • General Science & Technology