Abstract

AbstractThe Atmosphere‐Space Interactions Monitor (ASIM) is the first instrument in space specifically designed to observe terrestrial gamma‐ray flashes (TGFs). TGFs are high energy photons associated with lightning flashes and we perform the spectral analysis of 17 TGFs detected by ASIM. The TGF sample is carefully selected by rigorous selection criteria to keep a clean sample suitable for spectral analysis, that is, suitable count statistics, low instrumental effects, and reliable source location. Monte Carlo modeling of individual TGFs has been compared to the observed energy spectra to study the possible source altitudes and beaming geometries. A careful model of the instrumental effects has been developed and validated. Several combinations of source altitudes and beaming geometries are accepted by the statistical tests for all the TGFs in the sample resulting in a large uncertainty in the estimate of the intrinsic source luminosity. The analyzed TGFs show significant variations in observed fluence independent of the distance between source and ASIM. A lower limit on the maximum photon energy produced by TGFs is estimated to be 24 MeV for the analyzed TGFs. The intrinsic limitations of TGF spectral analysis from space are also investigated and it is found that the ability to constrain the source altitude and beaming geometries of TGFs strongly depends on the distance between source and satellite. With the current generation of instruments with effective areas in the range of few hundreds cm2, it is very difficult to constrain reliably the source properties without the help of simultaneous measurements in the radio band.

Highlights

  • Terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs) originate from Earth and are associated with lightning flashes

  • Several combinations of source altitudes and beaming geometries are accepted by the statistical tests for all the terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs) in the sample resulting in a large uncertainty in the estimate of the intrinsic source luminosity

  • The total number of counts per TGF in High Energy Detector (HED) and Low Energy Detector (LED) are shown, and we show the number of counts used in the spectral analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs) originate from Earth and are associated with lightning flashes. Dwyer (2008) realized that RREA multiplication alone could not explain the number of electrons at source and two leading hypotheses have been proposed to overcome this problem: the relativistic feedback mechanism (Dwyer, 2003, 2007, 2012) and the thermal runaway mechanism (Celestin & Pasko, 2011; Köhn & Ebert, 2015; Köhn et al, 2017, 2020; Xu et al, 2012). Both models are able to produce the required number of electrons at source. In the thermal runaway mechanism sufficiently many runaway electrons are produced in the high

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