Scientists Discover A New Kind Of Lightning 57
Exoman writes "Lightning that shoots upward up to 60 miles from the clouds? A team of researchers led by Han-Tzong Su of the National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan, videotaped the discharges last July from an observatory on the southern tip of the island. The lightning was firing from the top of thunderclouds more than 300 miles away across the South China Sea. The researchers reported their work Thursday in the journal Nature."
Pics & Video at Nature.com (Score:2, Informative)
Gigantic Optical Jets are not Blue jets (Score:5, Informative)
One, called blue jets, also streams upward but does not rise as high or spread over as wide an area as the giant jets in the new study.
Here is a link [nature.com] to the two articles in the most recent Nature, though w/out a site license or subscription all you can see is the first paragraph [nature.com] of the paper by Su et al.
Working link to pictures (Score:2)
This has been observed a lot before (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This has been observed a lot before (Score:1)
Seems to be something new (Score:5, Informative)
From the article:
Other types of high-altitude lightning events also have been documented in the past decade using high-flying planes and cameras carried aboard the space shuttle fleet. One, called blue jets, also streams upward but does not rise as high or spread over as wide an area as the giant jets in the new study.
Red sprites, another form of high-altitude lightning, travel downward toward clouds but appear to stop short of reaching the top of thunderclouds.
Su noted that while the other types of jets seem to occur over most parts of the world, the six gigantic optical jets observed so far have all been connected to thunderstorms over the open sea.
Also, from the Wired article [wired.com]:
Scientists had found plenty of evidence of sprites in the 1990s, but the larger, upward streaming lightning jets had escaped detection -- possibly because they may only occur over oceans, Inan said.
Re:Seems to be something new (Score:2)
Re:Seems to be something new (Score:1)
That is incorrect.
Wired News: Lightning Jets Blow Sky High (Score:3, Informative)
Lightning Jets Blow Sky High [wired.com]
Found a good image here (Score:5, Informative)
Check for yourself here [ncku.edu.tw].
I gotta say, I'd think it was the end of the world if I saw something like this on a regular basis.
but not the right kind.... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Found a good image here (Score:1)
Re:Found a good image here (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Found a good image here (Score:2)
While you replied to the parent of the same post I did, it appears your problem is with my post, as I am the one who mentioned the article in Geophysical Research Letters. I never claimed atmospheric phenomena weren't geophysical. I was pointing out that the images linked in the parent and the article they came from were not of the newly discovered gigantic optical jets, but of already fairly well studied sprites. So who's the idiot?
Re:Found a good image here (Score:2)
Re:New Kind? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:New Kind? (Score:2)
I thought i'd heard of this before... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I thought i'd heard of this before... (Score:1)
Quick! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Sounds of the Northern Lights and Lightning (Score:1)
But I thought... (Score:3, Redundant)
Erm, so are they saying that current now flows from a positively charged source to negative one?
Man, I can't keep up.
Re:But I thought... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:But I thought... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:But I thought... (Score:2)
Misquote by the reporter, perhaps.
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:But I thought... (Score:1)
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Interesting)
On an interesting side note, if you can find some slow-motion video of a lightning strike (which is probably out there somewhere, they had it on the Discovery Channel a few times) look for the little "streamers" (I think that's the term). The small branches of electricity that come up from the target. When the main bolt hits one of them, it connects to the ground and you have the main strike (BIG
Re:But I thought... (Score:2)
Re:But I thought... (Score:4, Funny)
--
There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
Wouldn't that be 11 types of lightning?
Re:But I thought... (Score:2)
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Redundant)
disclaimer: IANASSP (solid-state-phys.)
The convention is that current flows from + to -
This convemntion was set before it was found electrons are current conductors, and they actually flow from - to + , of course.
That being said, I must add that AFAIK electrical current in metals can also carried by positive "holes" in the electron sea, which flow from + to -
Wether such a description can be used in gasous/plasma environment I'm not sure.
Re:oops (Score:2)
ment to say current carriers, of course.
Re:oops (Score:1)
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Informative)
>Wether such a description can be used in >gasous/plasma environment I'm not sure.
For sure, in plasma physics, both types of carriers are very important, though in this case it is electrons and ions, rather than holes.
Re:But I thought... (Score:1)
Well, I know about ions in plasma. I was refering to a possible holes-in-electron-field description. Wether such a description exists, or is in any way useful, I do not know.
For solid state, the holes are the electronic eigen-functions left unoccupied in the conductance band. For plasma I do not see an analogical model. But that does not mean there isn't any.
(And alth
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Informative)
http://wvlightning.com/cgdesc.html [wvlightning.com]
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Informative)
If there is a positively charged object and a negatively charged object, they exert an equal attractive force on each other, right?
F = ma, or: a = F/m. The heavier the object, the slower it will accelerate due to the force.
Now, in a wire, the negatively charged electrons are significantly lighter than the positively charged nuclei they've detactched from. So it's the electrons that move in an electrical cir
Re:But I thought... (Score:2, Informative)
Please ignore the parent of this post (the one with F=ma, etc.). If you've got some mod points, please mod it down, or at least label it as "Funny" because just about everything in it is dead WRONG.
Going over all the made-up physics would just waste space. Please mod it down! (and me up)
Re:But I thought... (Score:2)
Sure, it's a little simple, but it presents, at a high-school physics level, the explanation. If you've got a better one (at the same level, not the college post-grad one), feel free.
So, here I am with mod points... (Score:3, Insightful)
If the poster is full of shit, explain his errors. Becuase otherwise, I have no basis to accept your words over his.
Re:But I thought... (Score:3, Informative)
The poster is wrong again about "charged ions" (by which he should mean plasma). Plasma isn't a solid; both species (positive
columbia (Score:3, Interesting)
from space.com [space.com]
While it's not likely Columbia was struck by lightning flying through clear skies some 40 miles high, it is possible that some kind of electrical event took place. At least one image is reported to exist in which it appears something like lightning is striking, or discharging from, the shuttle as it approached the California coast.
Also a little more detail in this article [virtuallystrange.net].
I never heard anything else so apparantly they decided that the picture was fake or irrelevant, I guess. I wasn't able to find any more current info.
Finally, images of gigantic optical jets (Score:5, Informative)
A question (Score:1)
Re:A question (Score:2, Insightful)
Carbon monoxide (fossil fuel burning, auto emissions, that MickieD you ate) creates a layer of ozone at the surface of the earth, which cannot go into the upper atmosphere, and is harmful.
Who is paying for this research??? (Score:1)
Re:Who is paying for this research??? (Score:1)
Stop the presses! (Score:1)
ack
This is in the 'propaganda' pictures. (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.astronet.ru:8100/db/x/msg/1170947
I don't think its new.
Bad News For Geosynchronous Cables? (Score:1, Interesting)