Until recently, when we talked about gamma rays we did so to refer to nuclear reactions and more extreme phenomena in the universe, such as supernova explosions or black holes. However, everything changed a couple of decades ago when it was discovered that thunderstorms have the ability to create gamma rays. What we didn’t imagine is that they are, literally, radioactive.
The study. In reality, we are looking at two joint works published in Nature. One of them describes the frequent emission of long-lived gamma-ray flashes over large parts of the atmosphere during tropical storms. The second details the newly identified phenomenon, called flickering gamma-ray flares or FGFs, and reflects on the relationship between the flares and other forms of storm cloud radiation.
A plane from the Civil War. It was all possible using NASA’s ER-2 high-altitude aerial science aircraft, essentially the repurposed U2 spy plane from the Cold War. The ER-2 flies at twice the altitude of a commercial airliner and has already been used in the Gulf of Mexico on 10 occasions to study tropical storms.
According to the study’s co-author, Professor Steve Cummer of Duke University, “several aerial initiatives have been carried out to find out whether these phenomena are common or not, but the results have been mixed and several campaigns over the United States have not No gamma radiation detected. “This project was designed to address these issues once and for all.”
The discovery. As we said at the beginning, gamma ray events in thunderstorms are divided into terrestrial gamma ray flashes (TGF), which last up to 100 microseconds, and gamma ray glows, which can last hundreds of seconds. However, the two papers found that FGFs consist of a kind of radiation, pulses with a duration longer than TFGs (hundreds of milliseconds), and appear to be connected to the longer-lasting glows.
“A lot more happens in thunderstorms than we ever imagined,” Cummer explains. “It turns out that, in essence, all large thunderstorms generate gamma rays throughout the day in many different ways.” In fact, ER-2 detected gamma ray flares that lasted for hours and covered an area of almost 9,065 square kilometers.
Theory. Based on the work, the team believes that lightning formation is created by free electrons accelerated by the intense electric field within the clouds. As they move upward, they interact with air and water molecules, and these collisions can create reactions that include the formation of antimatter and gamma rays.
For Martino Marisaldi, a physicist at the University of Bergen and lead author of one of the papers, “FGFs are strikingly different from both TGFs and glows, but they have some characteristics of both. That is why we consider them the missing link between the two phenomena. FGFs do not emit radio signals, but are usually followed, within milliseconds, by radio pulses called Narrow Bipolar Events, which are usually associated with the onset of lightning strikes. Therefore, it is interesting to hypothesize a causal connection between the two phenomena.”
Conclusion. The researchers indicate that the study debunks old theories. For example, it rules out other theoretical mechanisms for ray initiation, such as cosmic rays and guide rays. In addition, the work lays the foundation to further clarify the relationship between gamma bursts and storm clouds, as well as between lightning and their sources.
Since many of the recently observed gamma flashes occurred without the presence of lightning, it appears that electrified storms themselves are capable of generating gamma rays. A study that completes the certainly complex map of storm clouds, one of those shocking and amazing moments on our planet.
And no, the emission of gamma rays in tropical storms is not dangerous… given the place where they occur. Actually, if you were up there it would be the least of your worries.
Imagen | The ALOFT team / Mount Visual
In WorldOfSoftware | We have detected the largest solar radiation storm in seven years. The cause was an old acquaintance
In WorldOfSoftware | Lightning had been a great mystery to meteorologists for fifty years. They finally solved it