What's Made In A Thunderstorm And Faster Than Lightning? Gamma Rays!

What's Made in a Thunderstorm and Faster Than Lightning? Gamma Rays!

A flash of lightning. A roll of thunder. These are normal stormy sights and sounds. But sometimes, up above the clouds, stranger things happen. Our Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has spotted bursts of gamma rays - some of the highest-energy forms of light in the universe - coming from thunderstorms. Gamma rays are usually found coming from objects with crazy extreme physics like neutron stars and black holes. 

So why is Fermi seeing them come from thunderstorms?

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Thunderstorms form when warm, damp air near the ground starts to rise and encounters colder air. As the warm air rises, moisture condenses into water droplets. The upward-moving water droplets bump into downward-moving ice crystals, stripping off electrons and creating a static charge in the cloud.

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The top of the storm becomes positively charged, and the bottom becomes negatively charged, like two ends of a battery. Eventually the opposite charges build enough to overcome the insulating properties of the surrounding air - and zap! You get lightning.

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Scientists suspect that lightning reconfigures the cloud’s electrical field. In some cases this allows electrons to rush toward the upper part of the storm at nearly the speed of light. That makes thunderstorms the most powerful natural particle accelerators on Earth!

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When those electrons run into air molecules, they emit a terrestrial gamma-ray flash, which means that thunderstorms are creating some of the highest energy forms of light in the universe. But that’s not all - thunderstorms can also produce antimatter! Yep, you read that correctly! Sometimes, a gamma ray will run into an atom and produce an electron and a positron, which is an electron’s antimatter opposite!

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The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope can spot terrestrial gamma-ray flashes within 500 miles of the location directly below the spacecraft. It does this using an instrument called the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor which is primarily used to watch for spectacular flashes of gamma rays coming from the universe.

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There are an estimated 1,800 thunderstorms occurring on Earth at any given moment. Over the 10 years that Fermi has been in space, it has spotted about 5,000 terrestrial gamma-ray flashes. But scientists estimate that there are 1,000 of these flashes every day - we’re just seeing the ones that are within 500 miles of Fermi’s regular orbits, which don’t cover the U.S. or Europe.

The map above shows all the flashes Fermi has seen since 2008. (Notice there’s a blob missing over the lower part of South America. That’s the South Atlantic Anomaly, a portion of the sky where radiation affects spacecraft and causes data glitches.)

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Fermi has also spotted terrestrial gamma-ray flashes coming from individual tropical weather systems. The most productive system we’ve seen was Tropical Storm Julio in 2014, which later became a hurricane. It produced four flashes in just 100 minutes!

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Learn more about what Fermi’s discovered about gamma rays over the last 10 years and how we’re celebrating its accomplishments.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

More Posts from Fillthevoid-with-space and Others

Ep. 22 African-American Astrophiles - HD and the Void
As Black History Month 2018 wraps up, learn about some of the African-American men and women who have contributed to space research and exploration! 7 astronomers and 9 astronauts shine in this episode, which spans from the 1700s to modern-day folks.

February is Black History Month, and it’s been the perfect excuse to research all of the African-American people who have contributed to space research and exploration! I talk about seven astronomers and nine astronauts who have delved into outer space because it was just so dang amazing, nothing could stop them from learning about it; astrophiles, if you will. Space-lovers.

Below the cut, I have the transcript, sources, music credits, and timeline of people I talked about! Maybe you have something you want to hear me talk about that’s related to space. I’m kind of set for topics for the next few months but I’ll take suggestions here or you can tweet at me on Twitter at @HDandtheVoid, or you can ask me to my face if you know me. Please subscribe on iTunes, rate my humble podcast and maybe review it, and tell friends if you think they’d like to hear it!

(My thoughts on the next episode are the SOFIA observatory, Chuck Yaeger, the transit of Venus, or quasars and blasars. The next episode will go up March 19th, unfortunately; I have a work retreat the day I’d usually post and I don’t trust the wifi out there. See you then!)

Script/Transcript

Timeline

Benjamin Banneker, American (1731-1806)

Dorothy Vaughan, American (1910-2008)

Katherine Johnson, American (1918- )

Mary Jackson, American (1921-2005)

Ed Dwight, American (1933- )

Robert Henry Lawrence, American (1935-1967)

Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II, American (1936-2001)

Frederick Gregory, American (1941- )

Guion "Guy" Bluford, American (1942- )

Doctor Ronald E. McNair, American (1950-1986)

Ilan Ramon, Israeli, American (1954-2003)

Doctor Bernard Harris, Jr., American (1956- )

Doctor Mae Jemison, American (1956- )

Neil DeGrasse Tyson, American (1958- )

Michael P. Anderson, American (1959-2003)

Leland Melvin, American (1964- )

Doctor Beth A. Brown, American (1969-2008)

Sources

African Americans in Astronomy and Space via ThoughtCo (Mar 2017)

Benjamin Banneker via Encyclopedia Britannica

Benjamin Banneker via PBS

Benjamin Banneker via America’s Library

Benjamin Banneker via Brookhaven National Laboratory

Hidden Figures (2016)

Katherine Johnson via NASA

Mary Jackson via NASA

Dorothy Vaughan via NASA

Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II via Encyclopedia Britannica

Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II obituary via the American Astronomical Society

Ed Dwight via The History Makers

Robert Henry Lawrence via Black Past

Robert Henry Lawrence via PBS

Robert Henry Lawrence via Hill Air Force Base

Guion "Guy" Bluford via Space.com (Feb 2017)

Guion Bluford: “I mean, I laughed and giggled all the way up. It was such a fun ride.” 

Guion "Guy" Bluford via NASA

Guion "Guy" Bluford via Encyclopedia Britannica

Doctor Ronald E. McNair via NASA

Doctor Ronald E. McNair via Black Past

Doctor Ronald E. McNair via New Jersey Institute of Technology

Frederick “Fred” Gregory via NASA

Frederick “Fred” Gregory via Black Past

The Harris Foundation website

“empower individuals, in particular minorities and others who are economically and/or socially disadvantaged, to recognize their potential and pursue their dreams.”

Doctor Mae Jemison via NASA

Doctor Mae Jemison via NASA

Doctor Mae Jemison via the U.S. National Library of Medicine

Mae Jemison: “I followed the Gemini, the Mercury, and the Apollo programs, I had books about them and I always assumed I would go into space. Not necessarily as an astronaut; I thought because we were on the moon when I was 11 or 12 years old, that we would be going to Mars—I'd be going to work on Mars as a scientist. And that's despite the fact that there were no women, and it was all white males—and in fact, I thought that was one of the dumbest things in the world, because I used to always worry, believe it or not as a little girl, I was like: What would aliens think of humans? You know, these are the only humans?”

Michael P. Anderson via NASA

Michael P. Anderson via Black Past

Ilan Ramon via NASA

Leland Melvin via Space.com (Nov 2017)

Leland Melvin as Makers Men via Space.com (May 2017)

Leland Melvin via NASA

Leland Melvin via Pioneer Works

Doctor Beth A. Brown via the American Physical Society

Doctor Beth A. Brown via the American Astronomical Society

Doctor Beth A. Brown via NASA

Neil DeGrasse Tyson via Hayden Planetarium

Neil DeGrasse Tyson via the New Yorker

StarTalk Radio via Apple Podcasts

Intro Music: ‘Better Times Will Come’ by No Luck Club off their album Prosperity

Filler Music: ‘Dorothy Dandridge Eyes (feat. Esperanza Spalding)’ by Janelle Monáe off her album The Electric Lady.

Outro Music: ‘Fields of Russia’ by Mutefish off their album On Draught


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Next Generation Spacesuit Like Second Skin

Next Generation Spacesuit like Second Skin

Scientists from MIT have designed a next-generation spacesuit that acts practically as a second skin, and could revolutionize the way future astronauts travel into space. (Photo : Jose-Luis Olivares/MIT)

Astronauts are used to climbing into conventional bulky, gas-pressurized spacesuits, but this new design could allow them to travel in style. Soon they may don a lightweight, skintight and stretchy garment lined with tiny, muscle-like coils. Essentially the new suit acts like a giant piece of shrink-wrap, in which the coils contract and tighten when plugged into a power supply, thereby creating a “second skin.”

“With conventional spacesuits, you’re essentially in a balloon of gas that’s providing you with the necessary one-third of an atmosphere [of pressure,] to keep you alive in the vacuum of space,” lead researcher Dava Newman, a professor of aeronautics and astronautics and engineering systems at MIT, said in astatement.

“We want to achieve that same pressurization, but through mechanical counterpressure - applying the pressure directly to the skin, thus avoiding the gas pressure altogether. We combine passive elastics with active materials. … Ultimately, the big advantage is mobility, and a very lightweight suit for planetary exploration.”

Newman, who has worked for the past decade on a design for the next-generation spacesuit, describes the new garment in detail in the journal IEEE/ASME: Transactions on Mechatronics.

The MIT BioSuit’s coils, which are a main feature of the outfit, are made from a shape-memory alloy (SMA). At a certain temperature, the material can “remember” and spring back to its engineered shape after being bent or misshapen.

Skintight suits are not a novel idea, but in the past scientists have always struggled with the question: how do you get in and out of a suit that is so tight? That’s where the SMAs come in, allowing the suit to contract only when heated, and subsequently stretched back to a looser shape when cooled.

Though the lightweight suit may not seem at first like it can withstand the harsh environment that is outer space, Newman and his colleagues are sure that the BioSuit would not only give astronauts much more freedom during planetary exploration, but it would also fully support these space explorers.

Newman and his team are not only working on how to keep the suit tight for long periods of time, but also believe their design could be applied to other attires, such as athletic wear or military uniforms.

“An integrated suit is exciting to think about to enhance human performance,” Newman added. “We’re trying to keep our astronauts alive, safe, and mobile, but these designs are not just for use in space.”


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Eagle Nebula

Eagle Nebula

via reddit


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why is there star

gas cloud get squished (gravitational collapse) then sometimes smaller elements can squish together to make bigger elements (nuclear fusion) and this continues as long as the smolest elements (hydrogen and helium) are in the core


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I still highly recommend this good, beautiful web comic about love in space, and now it's all done! You can read it all.

The Final Three Chapters Are Up. Read It Now. 
The Final Three Chapters Are Up. Read It Now. 
The Final Three Chapters Are Up. Read It Now. 
The Final Three Chapters Are Up. Read It Now. 

The final three chapters are up. Read it now. 

That’s it folks, On A Sunbeam is over. Though I am pondering a sequel. 

Thank you all so much for following along. 


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I’m thinking of how to structure this whole podcast dealie so it’s more interactive, and what I’ve come up with is presenting a choice at the end of each episode of what people want to hear about next. Like a choose-your-own-adventure, except the adventure is me doing more research on a topic that I mentioned in the current podcast. I will retain veto power because there are some things I DEFINITELY want to cover, but it would be a cool way to see what other people are interested in with regards to space, to history, to technology, or to people!


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Ongoing Space Science Seeks to Keep Astronauts Healthy

ISS - Expedition 50 Mission patch. March 10, 2017 NASA is preparing for longer human journeys deeper into space and is exploring how to keep astronauts healthy and productive. The Expedition 50 crew members today studied space nutrition, measured their bodies and checked their eyes to learn how to adapt to living in space. The space residents also unloaded a cargo ship, worked on the Tranquility module and practiced an emergency simulation. The ongoing Energy experiment that ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet collected urine samples for today seeks to define the energy requirements necessary to keep an astronaut successful during a space mission. Pesquet also joined NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson for body measurements to learn how microgravity affects body shape and impacts crew suit sizing. Commander Shane Kimbrough checked his eyes today with Whitson’s help and support from experts on the ground.

Image above: Astronaut Shane Kimbrough and Thomas Pesquet were pictured inside the cupola just after the SpaceX Dragon was captured Feb. 23, 2017. Image Credit: NASA. Kimbrough worked throughout the day before his eye checks and configured the Tranquility module for upcoming electronics and communications work. Cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy continued unloading gear from the newly-arrived Progress 66 cargo ship. At the end of the day, Novitskiy joined Whitson and Pesquet for an emergency simulation with inputs from control centers in Houston and Moscow. Related links: Energy experiment: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/397.html Body measurements: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/1070.html Space Station Research and Technology: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/index.html International Space Station (ISS): https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html Image (mentioned), Text, Credits: NASA/Mark Garcia. Best regards, Orbiter.ch Full article


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Tampons were packed with their strings connecting them, like a strip of sausages, so they wouldn’t float away. Engineers asked Ride, “Is 100 the right number?” She would be in space for a week. “That would not be the right number,” she told them. At every turn, her difference was made clear to her. When it was announced Ride had been named to a space flight mission, her shuttle commander, Bob Crippen, who became a lifelong friend and colleague, introduced her as “undoubtedly the prettiest member of the crew.” At another press event, a reporter asked Ride how she would react to a problem on the shuttle: “Do you weep?”

Astronaut Sally Ride and the Burden of Being “The First” (via dinosaurparty)


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Escape Velocities For Every Planet In The Solar System

Escape velocities for every planet in the solar system


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fillthevoid-with-space - Fill the void with... SPACE
Fill the void with... SPACE

A podcast project to fill the space in my heart and my time that used to be filled with academic research. In 2018, that space gets filled with... MORE SPACE! Cheerfully researched, painstakingly edited, informal as hell, definitely worth everyone's time.

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