Photonuclear Reactions in Lightning Discovered from Detection of Positrons and Neutrons
Teruaki Enoto (1), Yuuki Wada (2, 3), Yoshihiro Furuta (2),, Kazuhiro Nakazawa (2), Takayuki Yuasa (4), Kazufumi Okuda (2), Kazuo, Makishima (3), Mitsuteru Sato (5), Yousuke Sato (6), Toshio Nakano (3), Daigo, Umemoto (3), Harufumi Tsuchiya (7) ((1) Kyoto University

TL;DR
This study provides the first clear evidence that lightning can trigger photonuclear reactions, producing neutrons and positrons, revealing a new natural particle acceleration process in Earth's atmosphere.
Contribution
It reports the first observational detection of neutrons and positrons from lightning, confirming photonuclear reactions occur naturally during thunderstorms.
Findings
Detection of neutron and positron signals during lightning.
Observation of gamma-ray emissions consistent with neutron capture.
Lightning as a natural source of photonuclear reactions.
Abstract
Lightning and thundercloud are the most dramatic natural particle accelerators on the Earth. Relativistic electrons accelerated by electric fields therein emit bremsstrahlung gamma rays, which have been detected at ground observations, by airborne detectors, and as terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs) from space. The energy of the gamma rays is sufficiently high to potentially invoke atmospheric photonuclear reactions 14N(gamma, n)13N, which would produce neutrons and eventually positrons via beta-plus decay of generated unstable radioactive isotopes, especially 13N. However, no clear observational evidence for the reaction has been reported to date. Here we report the first detection of neutron and positron signals from lightning with a ground observation. During a thunderstorm on 6 February 2017 in Japan, a TGF-like intense flash (within 1 ms) was detected at our monitoring sites…
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