Remote Sensing (May 2021)

Implications of GNSS-Inferred Tropopause Altitude Associated with Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes

  • Tao Xian,
  • Gaopeng Lu,
  • Hongbo Zhang,
  • Yongping Wang,
  • Shaolin Xiong,
  • Qibin Yi,
  • Jing Yang,
  • Fanchao Lyu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13101939
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1939

Abstract

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The thermal structure of the environmental atmosphere associated with Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes (TGFs) is investigated with the combined observations from several detectors (FERMI, RHESSI, and Insight-HXMT) and GNSS-RO (SAC-C, COSMIC, GRACE, TerraSAR-X, and MetOp-A). The geographic distributions of TGF-related tropopause altitude and climatology are similar. The regional TGF-related tropopause altitude in Africa and the Caribbean Sea is 0.1–0.4 km lower than the climatology, whereas that in Asia is 0.1–0.2 km higher. Most of the TGF-related tropopause altitudes are slightly higher than the climatology, while some of them have a slightly negative bias. The subtropical TGF-producing thunderstorms are warmer in the troposphere and have a colder and higher tropopause over land than the ocean. There is no significant land–ocean difference in the thermal structure for the tropical TGF-producing thunderstorms. The TGF-producing thunderstorms have a cold anomaly in the middle and upper troposphere and have stronger anomalies than the deep convection found in previous studies.

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