Lightning strikes kick off a game of electron pinball in space
When lightning strikes, the electrons come pouring down.
In a new study, researchers at CU 抖阴传媒在线 led by an undergraduate student have discovered a new link between weather on Earth and weather in space. The group used satellite data to show that lightning storms on our planet can knock especially high-energy, or 鈥渆xtra-hot,鈥 electrons out of the inner radiation belt鈥攁 region of space filled with charged particles that surrounds Earth like an inner tube.
The team鈥檚 results could help satellites and even astronauts avoid dangerous radiation in space. This is one kind of downpour you don鈥檛 want to get caught in, said lead author Max Feinland.
鈥淭hese particles are the scary ones or what some people call 鈥榢iller electrons,鈥欌 said Feinland, who received his bachelor鈥檚 degree in aerospace engineering sciences at CU 抖阴传媒在线 in spring 2024. 鈥淭hey can penetrate metal on satellites, hit circuit boards and can be carcinogenic if they hit a person in space.鈥
The 听in the journal Nature Communications.
The findings cast an eye toward the radiation belts, which are generated by Earth鈥檚 magnetic field. Lauren Blum, a co-author of the paper and assistant professor in the (LASP) at CU 抖阴传媒在线, explained that two of these regions encircle our planet: While they move a lot over time, the inner belt tends to begin more than 600 miles above the surface, and the听outer belt starts nearly 12,000 miles from Earth. These pool floaties in space trap charged particles streaming toward our planet from the sun, forming a sort of barrier between Earth鈥檚 atmosphere and the rest of the solar system.
But they鈥檙e not exactly airtight. Scientists, for example, have long known that high-energy electrons can fall toward Earth from the outer radiation belt. Blum and her colleagues, however, are the first to spot a similar rain coming from the inner belt.
Earth and space, in other words, may not be as separate as they look.
鈥淪pace weather is really driven both from above and below,鈥 Blum said.
Bolt from the blue
It鈥檚 a testament to the power of lightning.
When a lightning bolt flashes in the sky on Earth, that burst of energy may also send radio waves spiraling deep into space. If those waves smack into electrons in the radiation belts, they can jostle them free鈥攁 bit like shaking your umbrella to knock the water off. In some cases, such 鈥渓ightning-induced electron precipitation鈥 can even influence the chemistry of Earth鈥檚 atmosphere.
To date, researchers had only collected direct measurements of lower energy, or 鈥渃older,鈥 electrons falling from the inner radiation belt.
鈥淭ypically, the inner belt is thought to be kind of boring,鈥 Blum said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 stable. It鈥檚 always there.鈥
Her team鈥檚 new discovery came about almost by accident. Feinland was analyzing data from NASA鈥檚 now-decommissioned (SAMPEX) satellite when he saw something odd: clumps of what seemed to be high-energy electrons moving through the inner belt.
鈥淚 showed Lauren some of my events, and she said, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 not where these are supposed to be,鈥欌 Feinland said. 鈥淪ome literature suggests that there aren鈥檛 any high-energy electrons in the inner belt at all.鈥
The team decided to dig deeper.听
In all, Feinland counted 45 surges of high-energy electrons in the inner belt from 1996 to 2006. He compared those events to records of lightning strikes in North America. Sure enough, some of the spikes in electrons seemed to happen less than a second after lightning strikes on the ground.
Electron pinball
Here鈥檚 what the team thinks is happening: Following a lightning strike, radio waves from Earth kick off a kind of manic pinball game in space. They knock into electrons in the inner belt, which then begin to bounce between Earth鈥檚 northern and southern hemispheres鈥攇oing back and forth in just 0.2 seconds.
And each time the electrons bounce, some of them fall out of the belt and into our atmosphere.
鈥淵ou have a big blob of electrons that bounces, and then returns and bounces again,鈥 Blum said. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l see this initial signal, and it will decay away.鈥
Blum isn鈥檛 sure how often such events happen. They may occur mostly during periods of high solar activity when the sun spits out a lot of high-energy electrons, stocking the inner belt with these particles.
The researchers want to understand these events better so that they can predict when they may be likely to occur, potentially helping to keep people and electronics in orbit safe.
Feinland, for his part, is grateful for the chance to study these magnificent storms.
鈥淚 didn't even realize how much I liked research until I got to do this project,鈥 he said.
Other co-authors of the new study included Robert Marshall, associate professor in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences at CU 抖阴传媒在线, Longzhi Gan of Boston University, Mykhaylo Shumko of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory and Mark Looper of The Aerospace Corporation.
听

