

Sept. 10, 2013: We all know what comes out of the bottom of thunderstorms: bolts of lightning. Jagged columns of light plunge Earthward, heating the air to 50,000 degrees F, about five times hotter than the surface of the sun. Claps of thunder announce this process somewhere on Earth as often as 50 times a second.

Have you ever wondered, though, what comes out of the top?

A new ScienceCast video explores the strange things coming from the tops of thunderstorms. Play it

In recent decades researchers have discovered some strange things happening in the cloud tops. High above ordinary lightning, exotic forms known as red sprites and blue elves shoot toward the heavens, cold cousins to the fiery bolts below. In some places jets of antimatter fly upwards, triggering the detectors on NASA's orbiting high-energy observatories. And as often as 500 times a day, Earth briefly mimics a supernova, producing a powerful blast of gamma-rays known as a Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flash or TGF.

No know knows exactly how these phenomena are related either to each other or to the lightning down below.

A new experiment called "Firestation" onboard the ISS aims to find out. Firestation is a package of sensors designed to explore the links between TGFs, ordinary lightning, and sprites.

“The space station's orbit will carry Firestation directly above thousands of active thunderstorms during the one-year lifetime of the experiment,” says principal investigator Doug Rowland at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. "The ISS is perfect for this kind of research.”

Unlike previous experiments in upper atmospheric lightning, Firestation has the unique ability to observe thunderstorms at multiple wavelengths simultaneously. It can record the radio static from lightning, measure its optical glow (including the red and blue light of sprites and elves), and detect the gamma-rays and electrons associated with TGFs and antimatter events.

Rowland expects Firestation to observe up to 50 lightning strokes per day, at least one TGF every few hours, and a large TGF every couple of days. Such a firehose of multi-wavelength data will allow researchers to sort out cause-and-effect connections impossible to see in previous studies.

"There are several different types of lightning," Rowland says. "At the moment, we don't even know which type produces a gamma-ray flash." Firestation could solve that decades-old mystery in its first few weeks of operation.

The thing that intrigues Rowland most about TGFs is their surprising energetics.

"Gamma-rays are thought to come from the most violent events in the cosmos like stars colliding or exploding," he points out. "What a surprise to find them shooting out of the cold upper atmosphere of our own planet."

Something up there is accelerating low-energy particles of air to nearly the speed of light, producing gamma-radiation and, sometimes, a cascade of antimatter. Rowland wants to find out what that strange, unknown "something" is. Firestation is poised to crack the mystery.

The experiment was delivered to the ISS on August 3, 2013, by the Japanese robotic cargo vessel "Kounotori-4." It has since been installed on the station's exterior by the station’s robotic arm. All of the sensors were checked out at the end of August and full-time science operations are slated to begin in early September 2013.

Credits:

Author: Dr. Tony Phillips | Production editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA

Related Links:

Dark Lightning -- ScienceCast video

Are TGFs Hazardous to Air Travelers? -- Science@NASA

Firefly Mission to Study Terrestrial Gammaray Flashes -- Science@NASA

Thunderstorms Make Antimatter -- Science@NASA