An explanation of trans-ionospheric pulse pairs
H.-C. Wu

TL;DR
This paper proposes that trans-ionospheric pulse pairs are caused by relativistic electrons from lightning striking the ground, explaining their features and matching satellite observations, with potential applications in storm warning systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking lightning-produced relativistic electrons to trans-ionospheric pulse pairs, explaining their characteristics and aligning with satellite data.
Findings
Radio signals explained by relativistic electrons hitting ground
Model matches satellite measurements of pulse intensity
Potential for global storm warning systems
Abstract
Trans-ionospheric pulse pairs are the most powerful natural radio signals on the Earth and associated with lightning. They have been discovered for two decades by satellites, but their origin still remains elusive. Here we attribute these radio signals to relativistic electrons produced by cloud-to-ground lightning. When these electrons strike the ground, radio bursts are emitted towards space in a narrow cone. This model naturally explains the interval, duration, polarization, coherence and bimodal feature of the pulse pairs. Based on electron parameters inferred from x-ray observation of lightning, the calculated signal intensity agrees with the measurement of satellites. Our results are useful to develop global warning system of storms and hurricane based on GPS satellites.
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