David Sarria

and 23 more

We report the first Terrestrial Electron Beam detected by the Atmosphere‐Space Interactions Monitor. It happened on 16 September 2018. The Atmosphere‐Space Interactions Monitor Modular X and Gamma ray Sensor recorded a 2 ms long event, with a softer spectrum than typically recorded for Terrestrial Gamma ray Flashes (TGFs). The lightning discharge associated to this event was found in the World Wide Lightning Location Network data, close to the northern footpoint of the magnetic field line that intercepts the International Space Station location. Imaging from a GOES‐R geostationary satellite shows that the source TGF was produced close to an overshooting top of a thunderstorm. Monte‐Carlo simulations were performed to reproduce the observed light curve and energy spectrum. The event can be explained by the secondary electrons and positrons produced by the TGF (i.e., the Terrestrial Electron Beam), even if about 3.5% to 10% of the detected counts may be due to direct TGF photons. A source TGF with a Gaussian angular distribution with standard deviation between 20.6° and 29.8° was found to reproduce the measurement. Assuming an isotropic angular distribution within a cone, compatible half angles are between 30.6° and 41.9°, in agreement with previous studies. The number of required photons for the source TGF could be estimated for various assumption of the source (altitude of production and angular distribution) and is estimated between 1017.2 and 1018.9 photons, that is, compatible with the current consensus.

David Sarria

and 4 more

Gamma-Ray Glows (GRGs) are high energy radiation originating from thunderclouds, in the MeV energy regime, with typical duration of seconds to minutes, and sources extended over several to tens of square kilometers. GRGs have been observed from detectors placed on ground, inside aircraft and on balloons. In this paper, we present a general purpose Monte-Carlo model of GRG production and propagation. This model is first compared to a model from Zhou et al. (2016) relying on another Monte-Carlo framework, and small differences are observed. We then have built an extensive simulation library, made available to the community. This library is used to reproduce five previous gamma-ray glow observations, from five airborne campaigns: balloons from Eack et al. (1996b), Eack et al. (2000); and aircrafts from ADELE (Kelley et al., 2015), ILDAS (Kochkin et al., 2017) and ALOFT (Østgaard et al., 2019). Our simulation results confirm that fluxes of cosmic-ray secondary particles present in the background at a given altitude can be enhanced by several percent (MOS process), and up to several orders of magnitude (RREA process) due to the effect of thunderstorms’ electric fields, and explain the five observations. While some GRG can be explained purely by the MOS process, E-fields significantly larger than E_th (the RREA threshold) are required to explain the strongest GRGs observed. Some of the observations also came with in-situ electric field measurements, that were always lower than E_th , but may not have been obtained from regions where the glows are produced. This study supports the claim that kilometer-scale E-fields magnitudes of at least the level of E_th must be present inside some thunderstorms.