Geolocation of terrestrial gamma-ray flash source lightning

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Abstract

Terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs) are impulsive (∼1 ms) but intense sources of gamma-rays associated with lightning activity and typically detected via low orbiting spacecrafts. We present the first catalog of precise (<30 km error) TGF source locations, determined via ground-based detection of ELF/VLF radio atmospherics (or sferics) from lightning discharges, which enables precise geolocation of lightning locations. We present the distribution of source-tonadir distances, established due to effects of Compton scattering on the escaping photons. We find that TGFs occur in coincidence with the lightning discharge, but with a few ms variance, and that a detectable sferic at long distances is nearly always present. The properties of TGF-associated sferics and their connection to multiple-peak TGFs are highly variable and inconsistent, and are classified into two categories. © Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Cohen, M. B., Inan, U. S., Said, R. K., & Gjestland, T. (2010). Geolocation of terrestrial gamma-ray flash source lightning. Geophysical Research Letters, 37(2). https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GL041753

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