Abstract

The energy spectra of Thunderstorm ground enhancement (TGE) electrons and gamma rays are the key evidence for proving the origin of enhanced particle fluxes from thunderclouds. Till now, the electron energy spectrum was measured only by the Aragats large scintillation spectrometer ASNT. We changed the electronics board of the SEVAN detector installed at the Umwelt-Forschungs-Station (UFS, Schneefernerhaus, 2650 m asl) to allow these vital measurements near the top of the Zugspitze. The new electronics of the SEVAN detector, supplied with logarithmic ADC, for the energy release measurements up to 50 MeV (the thickness of the spectrometric scintillator is 25 cm). Thus, by measuring energy releases well above 3 MeV, we unambiguously separate Radon progeny gamma radiation from the electrons and gamma-ray relativistic runaway avalanches. Using the different energy release histograms allows for separating charged and neutral particles, enabling the disentangling of electron and gamma-ray energy spectra. On May 23, 2023, the first TGE was registered on Zugspitze by the SEVAN detector. The gamma-ray flux enhancement was 44%, corresponding to the observed count rate peak enhancement of 44σ. The gamma-ray energy spectrum was recovered, maximum energy is 60 MeV. On the same day, a large TGE was observed on Aragats. The TGE maximum flux overpasses the fair-weather flux by 207%, equivalent to a 1-minute peak significance of 400σ. Maximum energy of electrons is 50 MeV, gamma rays – 45 MeV. In this context, we will explore and explain the new capabilities of the SEVAN detector installed on Zugspitze and the rearranged similar detector on Aragats. We also present and compare electron and gamma-ray energy spectra from Aragats TGE and gamma-ray energy spectrum from Zugspitze.

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