http://www.astronomy.com/default.aspx?c=a&id=2853

GRBs spark protoplanetary lightning 
Solar-system-scale lightning storms triggered by gamma-ray bursts may be 
responsible for a key
feature of stony meteorites.

Robert Adler
February 2, 2005
Blasts of gamma rays may have spawned lightning storms as large as the solar 
system, fusing
primordial dust grains into chondrules â the mysterious BB-size spheres that 
abound in stony
meteorites â that, in turn, seeded the formation of Earth and the other 
planets 4.6 billion years
ago.

Astrophysicist Brian McBreen, at University College, Dublin, and his colleagues 
have been working
for years to solve the mystery of how chondrules formed. 

Their first model, proposed in 1999, featured direct melting of iron-rich dust 
grains by a blast of
radiation from a nearby gamma-ray burst (GRB). The researchers were encouraged 
when a laboratory
experiment in 2002 produced convincingly chondrule-like spheres by searing 
likely raw material with
intense X rays from the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. 

Still, that model had a major drawback: It could not explain the many 
chondrules that have melted
repeatedly. The early solar system had less than one chance in 100 of being 
close enough to a GRB
for its radiation alone to fuse dust grains into chondrules, and a vanishingly 
small chance of being
blasted by more than one nearby GRB. 

"For any protoplanetary disk within about 100 parsecs [326 light-years], a 
gamma-ray burst will
blast it and form chondrules," says McBreen. But since roughly one-third of the 
chondrules in our
solar system have melted more than once, he adds, "there have to be other 
mechanisms out there."

The team now believes it has found the missing mechanism â solar-system-size 
lightning storms
induced by bursts of gamma rays from different sources at different times. The 
scientists envision
lightning storms spanning the entire protoplanetary disk, with individual bolts 
crackling one-tenth
the distance from Earth to the Sun, each releasing a thousand billion times 
more energy than a
terrestrial lightning flash. The group's work appears in the January 17, 2005, 
issue of Astronomy &
Astrophysics Letters. 

The team calculates that fluxes of gamma rays powerful enough to spawn giant 
lightning storms can
come from GRBs located anywhere in the galaxy â from post-GRB emissions, 
which last longer and
irradiate larger segments of the galaxy than the GRBs themselves, and from soft 
gamma repeaters,
thought to represent starquakes in highly magnetized neutron stars. 

The researchers believe each of these gamma-ray sources is capable of sparking 
chondrule-forming
lightning storms, and, taken together, they may be able to account for the 
abundance and complexity
of chondrules in the solar system.

"GRBs can cause charge separation and lightning in protoplanetary disks," says 
McBreen. "The
lightning melts the dust grains to form chondrules that later aggregate to form 
planets."

The mechanism that separates positive and negative charges to power the 
lightning storms is called
Compton scattering. When a burst of gamma rays strikes molecular hydrogen, it 
produces a flood of
electrons and positrons moving in the same direction as the radiation. The 
positrons quickly
annihilate, leaving a wave of electrons to carry a negative charge for millions 
of miles across the
nebula. 

Alan Rubin, a geochemist at UCLA, applauds the team's demonstration that gamma 
rays can produce
sufficient charge separation to create nebula-size lightning storms as "an 
advance in lightning
theory."

If McBreen is right, chondrules in many meteorites would have formed 
simultaneously. "Chondrules
would have been melted all across the disk at the same time by the same GRB," 
he says. "That should
provide a simultaneous time marker between chondrules in different meteorites." 

He and his colleagues also point out that as radiation from GRBs in other 
galaxies spawns similar
lightning storms in planet-forming disks around young stars, the melting dust 
grains should produce
infrared flashes that large Earth- or space-based telescopes can detect. 

McBreen is eager to see the theory tested by comparing the formation time of 
chondrules in different
meteorites, and by observers scanning nearby galaxies for the infrared flashes 
the theory predicts. 

So far, the group's proposed link between gamma rays, lightning, and chondrules 
has sparked more
skepticism than support. Alan Boss, at the Carnegie Institute, sees it as 
"imaginative" but "highly
unlikely" because of the low frequency of GRBs. John Wood at the Smithsonian 
Astrophysical
Observatory, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, says the leading chondrule-forming 
mechanism remains
shock-wave heating of dust grains within the early solar nebula.

McBreen, however, believes his group has made "a credible case" that the 
chondrules that represent a
critical step in planet formation were spawned in repeated, titanic lightning 
storms, and that the
process is being repeated today in other galaxies.

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