1 / 24

Terrestrial Gamma-Ray Flashes ( TGFs) – Part II G. J. (Jerry) Fishman

Terrestrial Gamma-Ray Flashes ( TGFs) – Part II G. J. (Jerry) Fishman NASA-Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL USA for Michael S. Briggs University of Alabama in Huntsville Huntsville, AL USA Thunderstorms and Elementary Particle Acceleration (TEPA 2010)

taya
Télécharger la présentation

Terrestrial Gamma-Ray Flashes ( TGFs) – Part II G. J. (Jerry) Fishman

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Terrestrial Gamma-Ray Flashes (TGFs) – Part II G. J. (Jerry) Fishman NASA-Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL USA for Michael S. Briggs University of Alabama in Huntsville Huntsville, AL USA Thunderstorms and Elementary Particle Acceleration (TEPA 2010) Nor Amberd, Armenia 6-11 September 2010

  2. Four Orbiting Spacecraft Have Observed TGFs: • BATSE on the Compton Gamma-ray Observatory • Discovered TGFs (Science,1994) • Operational 1991-2000 • RHESSI - Solar Spectroscopy Spacecraft • Comprehensive TGF Observations • On-line Catalog Available; still in-orbit • AGILE • Italian Gamma-ray Astronomy Mission • Detects TGFs in calorimeter, still operational • The Gamma-ray Burst Monitor, “GBM” on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope • This talk

  3. GBM(Gamma-ray Burst Monitor) on theFermiObservatory - Launched June 11, 2008 - Primary Objective: GRBs Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope

  4. BGO Det. (1 of 2) NaI Det. (3 of 12) GBM Detector Locations on the Fermi Spacecraft – Launched June 2008

  5. Secondary electron beams MUST occur:

  6. TGF Simulation - Courtesy J. Dwyer, Florida Tech.Gamma-rays (red); Electrons (blue) 200 150 100 50 20 Altitude (km) -200 -100 0 100 200 Horizontal Distance (km)

  7. J. Dwyer, D. Smith, B. Grefenstette & B. Carlson ~2006: Some BATSE events and one RHESSI event are clearly electron beams: BATSE RHESSI

  8. Five “Electron” TGFs (in the first 50) • Characteristics: • Longer than usual • Fast rise, then decaying • Some are not over thunderstorms

  9. Long “Electron” TGF 9

  10. Positrons ! Spectrum of TGF 511 keV gamma line line from positrons 10

  11. 6 of the fastest TGFs Risetimes & Falltimes ~7 μs to 15 μs (4 μs per bin) (400 μs , total span}

  12. MeV Spectral Differences TGF #1: Low energies dominate TGF #7: High energies dominate 45 40 20 7 5.5 4.2 2.0 1.3 0.3 1 MeV 45 40 20 7 5.5 4.2 2.0 1.3 0.3 7

  13. Overlapping Double Pulses - 3 in the first 50 TGFs (~7 others are less obvious)

  14. TGF #1 , Individual Detectors, 0.1ms bins NaI (12) BGO (2)

  15. TGF #5 , Individual Detectors, 0.1ms bins NaI (12) BGO (2) Plot by M. Briggs

  16. Properties of 10 Short TGF Pulses Energies of Single Counts - BGO Detectors Only Time Profiles – All Detectors Combined

  17. Four Longer TGF Pulses (~1-3 ms) Time Profiles – All Detectors Combined Energies of Single Counts - BGO Detectors Only

  18. Fermi – GBM Locations of 85 TGFs

  19. RHESSI TGFs: Seasonal dependence follows lightning

  20. GLOBAL FLASH RATE – ANNUAL (from LIS-TRMM data) H. Christian et al.

  21. GBM TGF Papers - 2010 • “First Results on Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes from the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor”, M. S. Briggs, et al., JGR • “Associations between Fermi GBM Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes and sferics from the WWLLN”, V. Connaughton, et al, to appear in JGR • “Temporal Properties of Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes from the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on the Fermi Observatory”, G. J. Fishman, submitted to JGR • “Positrons observed from Terrestrial Lightning with Fermi GBM”, M. S. Briggs, et al., in preparation

  22. New! GBM-Fermi: August 2010 – Implemented “un-triggered” TGF capability Over selected “America’s Region”: - All RHESSI TGFs - RHESSI TGFs, May-November, in Americas GBM expects ~1 TGF per day in this Region (~30x initial rate!) (- may be able to expand region)

  23. First look at a GBM Un-triggered TGF Binned Data 20μs/bin Un-triggered (weak) TGFFull-Width: ~0.2 ms Total cts above bkgnd: ~35 cts Peak ct. rate: ~20 kcps (~ zero deadtime!) (Spectrum appears similar to strong TGFs)

  24. End

More Related