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Cosmic rays and Gamma Ray Bursts (GRB’s). Prepared by Brant Carlson, Morris Cohen, and Benjamin Cotts Stanford University, Stanford, CA IHY Workshop on Advancing VLF through the Global AWESOME Network. Gamma Rays and the Ionosphere. Solar ionization disappears at night
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Cosmic rays and Gamma Ray Bursts (GRB’s) Prepared by Brant Carlson, Morris Cohen, and Benjamin Cotts Stanford University, Stanford, CA IHY Workshop on Advancing VLF through the Global AWESOME Network
Gamma Rays and the Ionosphere • Solar ionization disappears at night • Recombination rates on the order of ms • Nighttime density maintained by cosmic ray flux
Gamma-ray bursts • Associated with very energetic explosions • Collapsing star • Supernova formation • Typically lasts a few ms to several minutes • Accidentally discovered by Vela-3 spacecraft in 1967
Gamma-ray waveform • Broad variety of durations and shapes
Gamma-ray burst on the ionosphere From Fishman et al. 1988
Massive gamma-ray burst From Inan et al. 2007
Second timescale characteristics -25 dB disturbance!! From Inan et al. 2007 From Inan et al. 2007
Minutes timescale characteristic Slow recovery From Inan et al. 1988
Hour timescale characteristic Recovery lasts for over 1 hour! From Inan et al. 2007
ELF emissions generated Mechanism for ELF emissions in question…. From Inan et al. 2007
GRBs/SGRs and VLF sensing • VLF remote sensing of D-region ionosphere • GRBs repeatedly disturb ionosphere
NLK: 16-hour observations Largest disturbances
SGR-Illuminated hemisphere January 22nd, 2009, 6:48 UT Calculated using http://home.att.net/~srschmitt/script_celestial2horizon.html
Sunrise position 0250 UT 0650 UT 1050 UT