All posts tagged: X-rays

Scientists finally explain how lightning forms inside storm clouds

Scientists finally explain how lightning forms inside storm clouds

For as long as people have watched storms roll across the sky, lightning has inspired awe and fear. You can see the flash and hear the thunder, but the true beginning of a lightning bolt has remained hidden deep inside clouds. Scientists have known for decades how lightning travels once it forms, but the exact trigger inside a thundercloud stayed uncertain. A new study now offers the clearest explanation yet for how lightning truly begins. The research was led by Victor Pasko, a professor of electrical engineering in the Penn State School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His team combined advanced mathematical modeling with real-world observations to explain a powerful chain reaction inside storm clouds. This reaction links strong electric fields, high-energy electrons, X-rays, and gamma rays into a single process that starts lightning. “Our findings provide the first precise, quantitative explanation for how lightning initiates in nature,” Pasko said. “It connects the dots between X-rays, electric fields and the physics of electron avalanches.” This work does more than solve a scientific puzzle. It …

Astronomers watch a supermassive black hole X-ray flare ignite an ultra-fast galactic wind

Astronomers watch a supermassive black hole X-ray flare ignite an ultra-fast galactic wind

A supermassive black hole in the spiral galaxy NGC 3783 just delivered an X-ray surprise that astronomers have never watched unfold so quickly. Using the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton and the JAXA-led XRISM mission, researchers saw a bright flare rise and fade, and then saw a burst of ultra-fast wind appear within about a day, racing outward at roughly 60,000 kilometers per second, near one-fifth the speed of light. “We’ve not watched a black hole create winds this speedily before,” Gu says. “For the first time, we’ve seen how a rapid burst of X-ray light from a black hole immediately triggers ultra-fast winds, with these winds forming in just a single day.” XRISM Xtend light curves from the NGC 3783 campaign. Left: soft- and hard-band light curves, shown in black and red, respectively. The light curve has been binned to multiples of the XRISM orbit (5747 s), and in this paper we count time since the start of the XRISM observation. Right: X-ray variability surrounding the main soft flare at t ∼ 2.8 × 105 s. (CREDIT: Astronomy & …

Inside world’s ultimate X-ray machine before it becomes more powerful

Inside world’s ultimate X-ray machine before it becomes more powerful

An illustration of an electron beam traveling through a niobium cavity, a key component of SLAC’s LCLS-II X-ray laser SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory The Klystron Gallery, a concrete hallway studded with evenly spaced metal cylinders, is long enough to extend past my line of sight. But as I stand inside it, I know that something even more spectacular hides beneath my feet. Below the Klystron Gallery is a gigantic metal tube that extends for 3.2 kilometres: the Linac Coherent Light Source II (LCLS-II). This machine, located at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California, generates X-ray pulses more powerful than those produced at any other facility in the world, and I am visiting it because it recently broke one of its own records. Soon, however, its most powerful components will shut down for an upgrade. Once it is turned back on, possibly as early as 2027, its X-rays will have more than double the energy. “It will be like going from a twinkle to a lightbulb,” says James Cryan at SLAC. Describing LCLS-II as a …