When Lightning Strikes 285
ctwxman writes "For most of the United States (sorry West Coast), this is the season for lightning. It is as powerful as it is spectacular to look at. It is destructive too - by itelf or through the hail, straight line winds and tornadoes that often accompany it. As someone who forecasts the weather, I'm often asked about lightning. As you might imagine, there's plenty to see about lightning on the Internet. The conditions necessary and a little bit of the physics behind lightning are explained by Jeff Haby, a meteorologist (one of my professors actually) at Mississippi State University. Once forecasters get a handle on what's going on, they put the word out through the Storm Prediction Center. Regular outlooks are issued by SPC for severe storms. Once those storms rear their ugly heads, they're followed with mesoscale discussions looking at the active areas. The Storm Prediction Center is also the place where Severe Thunderstorm and Tornado Watches are issued and storm related damage reports are compiled. Lots of hobbyists like to track lightning strikes on their own, and there's equipment available to do just that. Getting hit by lightning is never fun, though not always fatal. National Geographic chronicled an amazing story of a lightning strike, and rescue, on Grand Teton."
NLDN (Score:5, Informative)
Re:NLDN (Score:5, Interesting)
And then there's Roy Sullivan. A quick google [about.com] turned this up:
Roy Cleveland Sullivan was a Forest Ranger in Virginia who had an incredible attraction to lightning... or rather it had an attraction to him. Over his 36-year career as a ranger, Sullivan was struck by lightning seven times - and survived each jolt, but not unscathed. When struck for the first time in 1942, he suffered the loss of a nail on his big toe. Twenty-seven years passed before he was struck again, this time by a bolt that singed his eyebrows off. The next year, in 1970, another strike burned Sullivan's left shoulder. Now it looked as though lightning had it out for poor Roy, and people were starting to call him The Human Lightning Rod. He didn't disappoint them. Lightning zapped him again in 1972, setting his hair on fire and convincing him to keep a container of water in his car, just in case. The water came in handy in 1973 when, seemly just to taunt Sullivan, a low-hanging cloud shot a bolt of lightning at his head, blasting him out of his car, setting his hair on fire and knocking off a shoe. The sixth strike in 1976 injured his ankle, and the seventh strike in 1977, got him when he was fishing, and put him in the hospital for treatment of chest and stomach burns. Lightning may not have been able to kill Roy Sullivan, but perhaps the threat of it did. He took his own life in 1983. Two of his lightning-singed ranger hats are on display at Guinness World Exhibit Halls.
Re:NLDN (Score:2)
"So, how many times were you struck by lightening?"
"s-six... s-s-six... ss-six..."
"Wow, six times, eh? That's impressive!"
"... s-sixty-six t-times..."
Re:NLDN (Score:2)
Re:NLDN (Score:2)
Re:NLDN (Score:2)
Re:NLDN (Score:2)
Re:NLDN (Score:5, Informative)
Re:NLDN (Score:2)
Quite apart from the fact that I saw Richard "Hamster" Hammond sitting in the new Golf while it was struck with lightning on Top Gear last Sunday.
Any protection you get from sitting in a car is more likely due it acting as a Faraday cage.
Re:NLDN (Score:3, Informative)
His surname is Romansch (Rhaeto-Romanic), from Switzerland. Grew up in a tight-knit Catholic family.
"Vaisala Lightning Explorer" (Score:2)
lightning wit (Score:4, Funny)
lightning storm?
A: She thought she was getting her picture taken.
Side effects (Score:3, Interesting)
he was in his pool ans could hear thunder in the distance so he throught he should probably get out, but as the cloud got closer the surface of the pool started to "boil". The huge negative chage in the cloud induced an equal positive charge in the ground underneath it. As this positive charge was attracted to the cloud it made ions in the water making it boil. After pondering that for a minute he jumped ou tof the pool so as not to be killed.
Re:Side effects (Score:2)
Oh yeah, community collej must have been great fun.
Did you do cold fusion experiments, too?
Re:Chlorine pulled toward surface? (Score:4, Informative)
I concure with this possability, it may not have been boiling (as per reaching an approx. temp. of 100 degrees C (220 F) but may have appeared to be boiling due to the movement described above.
This is similar to how microwaves work. [howstuffworks.com] Also Ionization is not just used for nuclear fusion, quick question for you...
Q: If nothing sticks to teflon, how do they get teflon to stick to the pan?
A: They ionize the pan with a positive (+) charge, and ionize the teflon with a negitive (-) charge and it will stick like the opposing ends of two magnets
"Physics class is now over, please read pages 121-320 by next class"
better read (Score:5, Informative)
Re:better read (Score:2)
Great Headline (Score:5, Funny)
Not really on it's own merits, but I instantly imagined the remarks from when the "story" is posted again in 2 weeks: "When Lightning Strikes Twice"
Re:Great Headline (Score:3, Funny)
Watching lightening...up close (Score:4, Interesting)
Absolutely breathtaking.
Re:Watching lightening...up close (Score:3, Interesting)
Absolutely breathtaking.
I completely agree. We used to spend a lot of time along the Colorado River (Mead and Havasu). You wake up and start with a beautiful, blue clear sky. As the day goes on you can see the clouds forming and
Re:Watching lightening...up close (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Watching lightening...up close (Score:5, Interesting)
Until they tore it down in '98 or '99, New Mexico Tech used to have a lightning observatory right in the middle of campus, part of the legacy of E.J. Workman; it was actually an air traffic control tower, with a full 360-degree view. (Workman was an interesting character himself, having been sent down to Socorro from University of New Mexico to work on the "second most important" technological achievement of WWII, the proximity fuze, at what later became the explosives research and test facility at New Mexico Tech).
But, anyway- New Mexico has a very high density of lightning, second only to parts of FL (which has its own lightning research center). From firsthand experience, I can state that the size and duration of the strokes can be extremely powerful; one night I was woken up by a particularly powerful one that set off a number of car alarms. There was no storm with no rain before or after- it was as if one of the explosives bunkers had detonated up on the Hill at EMRTC.
Parts of eastern New Mexico get it even harder. There has to be something about the magnitude of the storms, and maybe the flatness of the land, that forms a particularly large discharge. A good New Mexican frog-strangler is something to behold.
Re:Watching lightening...up close (Score:2)
I always used to love spending time with Charlie at Workman center [spril.com] each year. He was my undergraduate advisor.
Turns out he was pretty good at making UFO's as well [csicop.org]. At least there sure are a lot of people who believe the weather balloons he used to make during project mogul were UFO's!
I miss those afternoon summer thunderstorms in Socorro.
Pffft! You want lightning? (Score:3, Funny)
There are lightning discharages here that are larger than your entire planet.
Discharges around what you call "the Great Red Spot" are particularly beautiful.
Wait.
I meant go to Jupiter, not come to Jupiter.
I, of course, have never been there myself, any more than any of you humans have.
Wait.
I meant us humans, not you humans.
Yeah, that's it.
Us humans.
Us humans have never been to Juptier.
Damn, this vocal entry thing isn't working.
Computer, don't hit the submit but
FffiiiiiZZZAP! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:FffiiiiiZZZAP! (Score:4, Interesting)
No lightning for CA? (Score:5, Funny)
Damn. And I had my cable hanging down from the Hill Valley Clock Tower all ready too.
Re:No lightning for CA? (Score:2)
- California Boy
lightning.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never been directly struck by lightning, but I have been "zapped" i guess you can say, by some sort of mild electric shock when a big bolt hit right near my apartment complex.
I ran upstairs to the 3rd floor, to shut a window because it had been raining.. I go to close the window, i'm standing on wet carpet (the whole room is practically soaked) and suddenly BLAM. Big lightning strike, and I got shocked. It almost felt like my whole body was doing a tongue test on those square 9v batteries. Probably the closest i've ever come to being struck.
Has this happened to anyone else? I had previously believed that one could only get struck or zapped by lightning outside of a house.
Re:lightning.. (Score:4, Informative)
This is why people are discouraged from "seeking shelter" under large trees during a lightning storm. Not only is the taller object more likely to be struck by lightning, but also the radio waves emitted within a 10-15 ft radius can cause you to go into cardiac arrest. Dangerous stuffs if you're too close to the strike point.
Re:lightning.. (Score:5, Informative)
There is a great big electric field associated with a nearby channel, and field gradients can result in some really interestingly large voltages to appear across things like the ground.
However, to call these fields radio waves implies that they are oscillatory in nature, which is simply not accurate. I'm a lightning researcher, and in the course of my work I've studied lightning electric fields recorded during close lightning strikes. It's not my personal favorite area of interest, but I know enough to say that "radio waves" is a poor description.
The reason that you don't stand near trees during an electrical storm is because 1) the flash is likely to initiate a side channel which passes from the tree-trunk (radio tower, light pole, bus stop, etc) through you, making you very unhappy; and 2) because the HUGE injection of current into the ground causes the ground itself to "rise" from a nominal 0 volts to several kilo- or even mega-volts, and that voltage falls off as the square of the distance... so that if your two legs are 10 feet and 12 feet respectively from the channel termination point, you might experience a voltage of several kV (or more) between them. This causes a current to flow up one leg and down the other, and makes you (and your goodies, don't ya know) very unhappy. This is worse if you happen to have four legs which CAN'T be placed together, like if you're a cow or horse. Zap!
Re:lightning.. (Score:2, Interesting)
E field (Score:3, Interesting)
That's also why you should NOT lie down on the ground to avoid a strike - instead, you should "become a basketball with feet" - curl up into a ball and balance on the balls of your feet, with your feet as close together as possible (if your balance isn't good enough, then put your feet flat). That way, if a strike hits close to your, the potential across
Re:lightning.. (Score:2)
Trees (Score:2)
Re:lightning.. (Score:2, Interesting)
"Can I get struck by lightning when I'm indoors?" [howstuffworks.com]
NWS Lightning Safety: Indoors [noaa.gov]
-Mikey P
Re:lightning.. (Score:5, Interesting)
A split second before your hit you know something is up, your hair starts to stand on end and you get goosebumps.
Then it hits. You feel torn towards the lightning stream almost as if it attracts you to it. All your bodies muscles and tendons constrict, your fingers tighten so hard your nails cut into the palms of your hands. Its like licking one hell of a 12volt battery.
Then you collapse and pass out for a bit. When you wake up your "exit point" in this case my foot is burning beyond belief, due to the fact that it is quite seriously burnt. Your mouth tastes of copper and you can smell electricity everywhere.
Afterwards your hair stands on end for HOURS and doesn't go down.
At least that is my experiance.
As someone who forecasts the weather... (Score:5, Funny)
Sorry, you've lost all credibility right there.
Re:As someone who forecasts the weather... (Score:3, Interesting)
Have a look at this [noaa.gov], for example.
Re:As someone who forecasts the weather... (Score:2, Informative)
NMT LMS (Score:5, Informative)
It has some pretty neat images of their lightning mappings. You can see the lightning in 3D, and the precursors to lightning, etc.
Not much info, but there's been some really neat research going on out there. Maybe someone else knows more.
Something smells like aluminum... (Score:3, Interesting)
I think this will be the season for antennae and wireless shops around the US. With the growing WAN's around the place, and the endless similarity between a lightning rod and those antennae... Ouch!
Fun to watch but expensive to reproduce...
Re:Something smells like aluminum... (Score:3, Interesting)
YDI had built a all-in-one antenna that had the Ethernet gear and transcever all
Info on thunder and lightning (Score:2)
Unpredictable (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Unpredictable (Score:3, Interesting)
Ugh. You know how they talk about how games desensitize people? I've been playing Unreal Tournament 04 way too much over the last week. One of the weapons that I've grown to love is the Lightning gun. It fires a bolt of lightning and *zaap*. I love sniping with it.
Despite really enjoying zapping people with this game, reading that somebody you know (or your wife knows...) died with it really made my heart sink.
I hope I'm not being
Do Detectors Work? (Score:4, Funny)
Still the noise from the detector is better than golf balls hitting my roof so anything that gets people off the course and give me peace is welcome.
Re:Do Detectors Work? (Score:3, Insightful)
There's a very good reason to call a baseball game when there's lightning around. Most of the fields around here have a metal backstop usually around 15 feet tall. The umpire (the one who gets to decide to call the game) stands under this giant lightning rod.
If the umpire doesn't call a game with lightning nearby, he's probably as dumb and blind as the losing team's fan's think he is.
Weather (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Weather (Score:2, Interesting)
I was going to mod this, but I thought I should reply instead. I call BS on the claim you could see the stars through the cloud breaks. I don't know what you were looking at, but it wouldn't have been the stars unless the storm clouds were dense enough and thick enough to extend all the way through the atmosphere to mitigate the effect of the atmosphere in distributing light. This is the same reason why you can't see stars when looking up through a long chimney / mine shaft / whatever during the day.
oh let me count the lightning stories... (Score:5, Interesting)
A guy down the block got his ham radio antenna hit, blowing the base of the antenna to pieces. (severing the ground connection in the process, unfortunately) The lightning then took out his coax like det cord, which was laid down under one layer of shingles. This shot the shingles that were laid over the coax right off the house. It then took out his radio, followed the power cord into the electrical system in his house, took out all the appliances in his kitchen, and then went underground to his garage and took out three marine radios that were on charge at the time.
A friend and former co-worker had an employee of his arrive late to work. When asked of the excuse, he said he got his truck struck by lightning on the way in. And boy did he. They never found any of the whip antenna. The base of it, solid brass, was melted like ice cream. Blew out the back sliding windows where the coax came into the cab. Blew the radio to pieces. Finally found ground via front left quarterpanel, which was permanently bowed inward from the sudden heating.
I worked on someone's computer recently, they had pictures on their desktop of a relative's car that was struck while going down the highway. It hit the rear mounted stereo antenna, arced into the body of the car, (creating a 1/2" hole in the metal near the antenna mount) and found ground via ALL FOUR TIRES, arcing across the wheel wells and apparently through the steel belts, flattening all four tires in the process. It also blew out the rear window from the concussion.
My car was struck by lightning while on the road too. Took out the headlights and the windshield wipers, which then started working normally a few hours later. (probably tripped the breakers that those items usually are on instead of fuses)
I have a large ham radio antenna at my house as well, which has been struck at least three times so far, you can count the char marks on it. Thanks goes to a 1/4" solid aluminum ground wire and a 10ft copper water pipe for a ground rod, the lightning has never even scratched my radio, which remains plugged in and cabled up 24/7.
Lastly, if you're ever on a beach and run into a patch of what appears like a cross between pavement and sand, that's where lightning has struck the beach and melted the sand into glass. Really weird effect...
Im guess I am lucky. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:oh let me count the lightning stories... (Score:3, Interesting)
Lightning had struck the outside light at the corner of this house, and had blown the insulation off the wire. It had smashed like toffee, almost like it had been frozen in liquid nitrogen and hit with a hammer.
An office I used
Re:oh let me count the lightning stories... (Score:4, Interesting)
why does that bother you?
If you had a single voltage source, and 4 resistors in parallel, would you not get current flow through all 4?
What if one was a million times as resistive as the others?
Re:oh let me count the lightning stories... (Score:2)
I got it from a safety course I went to from the rail company about working around electric locomotives. It was from some sort of army vehicle that tried to cross under a set of overhead traction wires that oops! had an antenna a little bit too tall. That was just 25kV.
Re:oh let me count the lightning stories... (Score:3, Informative)
As far as the car thing goes, well I actually know someone firsthand who lost all four tires on the sawgrass expressway at speed when struck by lightening, car was totaled......so I'd have to say no it's not bullshit...
If you live in Florida and it's your time to go it will get you, one of my childhood friends lo
Watching thuderstorms in the midwest... (Score:2)
I prefer to stay inside, and not present a path to ground (or more accurately a path from ground) for the random bolts.
Numerical Weather Prediction and others (Score:3, Insightful)
1) People on TV usually do not have a BS in meteorology. They are usually journalists, hence, they have not taken the required math and physics that one needs in order to understand that air behaves like a fluid in a nonlinear fashion. Please take the time to distinguish between people that have science degrees and people who do not.
2) Weather Prediction. For anyone that complains about how meteorologists cannot predict the weather, I would like to see you apply your skills of solving Partial Differential Equations that are extremely complicated in a Lagrangian reference frame. Numerical weather models have to approximate solutions to the complicated PDEs and even have to reduce important terms (Scale Analysis) that, of course, play a significant role in the long term.
3) The Storm Prediction Center is located in Norman, OK. As an undergraduate... I love to learn about the vertical tilting and stretching of a baroclinically induced horizontal vorticity zone... i.e.. Tornadogenesis. SPC saves lives and employees people that have masters in meteorology. They are highly qualified and are not the usual crapfest that you see on The Weather Channel or local news stations.
Moof!
Re:Numerical Weather Prediction and others (Score:2, Funny)
People on TV usually do not have a BS in meteorology.
i beg to differ. tv weather people have substantial BS when it comes to weather.
Re:Numerical Weather Prediction and others (Score:2)
Re:Numerical Weather Prediction and others (Score:2)
You're right, my local forecaster [nimm.com] doesn't list a BS in Meteorology. Though he does have a Masters of Science in it. Still manages to get the weather wrong a lot of the time. A
just a few weeks ago (Score:5, Interesting)
There was a flash very big boom, during which a piece of electrical equipment up the street turned into sparks. A moment later, the sky lit up again, this time not white, but blue.
My office is on the forth floor in a not very big town, so I have pretty good view of a lot of it, and it was lit up as bright as the brightest of sunny days. But blue.
I believe I saw a flashover [wvlightning.com], which occurs when lightning hits something electrical, and the electricty within, which had previously been happy doing its thing, jumps out and follows the lightning bolt's path. This can continue for several seconds after the lightning has stopped.
My girlfriend was there to see this too--in fact, she dropped to her knees and said "that's the scariest thing I've ever seen." And I agree. Lightning is fascinating stuff, and terrifying.
But... but... (Score:2)
Seriously, though... slow news day? This is the type of stuff they run in the papers when noone's found an interesting way to bleed in the past week, or a bad reason to sue some wealthy corporation.
Weather spotting by Chaos Theory (Score:5, Funny)
I'm in Sydney, Australia and I just saw a butterfly flapping its wings. Someone on the other side of the world is about to get a tornado on their doorstep.
Anyone know of a homebrew lightning detector? (Score:2)
Speaking of which, is there any way to detect cosmic rays without a university dept backing me up? The things are so rare, that I'd never know it wasn't working....
Walter De Maria: Lightning Field (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Walter De Maria: Lightning Field (Score:2)
It does look like a clever installation, and certainly would be fun to visit during a storm. As far as supporting the arts goes, I was with you until I came across this:
So I've got to pay $135 to spend the night during storm season (and they not-so-subtly request that I pay more
Lightning kills cows (Score:2, Interesting)
Humans, on the other hand, don't have as much of a problem, because their feet are so close together.
Re:Lightning kills cows (Score:2, Interesting)
1rst hand experience (Score:5, Interesting)
I happened to be standing at the patio door: bare foot on a forced-air furnace register (vent) which was effectively well-grounded. The next lightning bolt struck a nearby tree or the house. It didn't really matter where it struck. I could literally feel the charge race through my body and make my hair stand on end. The flash and boom were simultaneous.
A few minutes later we were sitting at the kitchen table. Another close-by strike caused a 6-inch long blue arc that leapt from the electric stove's fuse panel through a stainless pot and grounded out through the stove's element. It also blew out all the lights on that side of the house.
That was by far the scariest storm I have ever experienced.
when it strikes sensitive equipment (Score:5, Interesting)
by pure coincidence I opened my browser to /. while waiting for the voltages to come back up and I see this story up at the top.
Re:when it strikes sensitive equipment (Score:5, Funny)
Re:when it strikes sensitive equipment (Score:3, Funny)
Arushna O'chenga! (Score:2)
Personal experience (Score:2)
Lightning Season in Alaska (Score:2)
In my area, (Alaska Range) as well as the Interior and the Brooks Range of Arctic Alaska all have very severe storms; I have witnessed them, and the resulting forest fires, firsthand. I have recorded some fierce storms, with lightning, marble-size hail, strong winds, and once I swear was
lightning kills trucks dead (Score:2)
America Is not the only place in the world (Score:2)
Mmm... weather... (Score:2)
Anywho... no interesting stories here, but there's a neat lightning map here [lightningstorm.com]. It shows all of the lightning strikes in the nation for the last three hours. Also, if anyone has a "weatherspeak" dictionary, that'd be great. I do a decent job of interpreting NWS forecasts, but crazy stuff like:
Re:Mmm... weather... (Score:2)
Translation (as I can't find this text in Google, I'm assuming IA is Iowa, and that this was a recent advance bulletin regarding weather moving towards Illinois):
Nasty Lightning Strike With Photo Gallery (Score:5, Interesting)
After the rehearsal, I returned to the computer lab, sat down at my PC, and noticed that it was powered down... and it wouldn't power up. I wandered into our LAN/Server/Broom/Tool/Ex-Bathroom closet and discovered that 2 servers, 4 PCs, our SDSL router, our 24-port Switch, and the Ethernet port on the motherboard of 10 new PCs were all dead. The PCI NIC in my PC had a crater in it. Our PBX was toast and the 25 and 50-pair phone cables between buildings were severely damaged as well..
If you'd like to see a short Flash-enabled gallery of the destruction, go here [austinwaldorf.org] As usual, click on a thumbnail to see a larger image.
A company that is no longer in business installed our punch-down blocks, and they grounded the blocks to a faucet attached to a copper pipe. The person who did the plumbing on the building said that the copper pipe does not travel far before it continues its run as a PVC pipe. The cable and punch-down block installer did not use a true power ground with a 6-ft spike in the ground. We did have lightning arresters on the blocks, but I found the one connected to our SDSL line charred on the floor. It got blown off the wall (one million volts, 200,000 Amps coming through!) The surge traveled over our data network, not through the AC power supplies.
I've also been looking at web sites that indicate that there's no conclusive proof that lighting rods are effective deterrents even though they're recommended in many building codes.
Having fun in Austin,
A Chief Technical Agonizer
p.s. We discovered today that the light board in our auditorium also got nailed. It's like "Close Encounters" in there without the tones, but then again, we haven't fully tested the sound board yet. Who knows what we'll find tomorrow !!!
Re:Nasty Lightning Strike With Photo Gallery (Score:2)
I don't have the photo gallery to prove it, but just about 2 weeks ago, I lost a 30GB HD to lightning. It was the first drive I've lost in, oh, 10 years of serious computing (to any problem), and the first serious loss I've ever suffered to lightning.
Worse, I lost an outlet on the APC surge protector into which my month-old computer is plugged. After the storm had passed (we suffered a brief brownout) I went to power the computers back on, only to find that one wouldn't fi
Sprites (Score:3, Interesting)
Here is a pic [nasa.gov] of a sprite.
This is linked to in a longish article [nasa.gov]. See under Recent Developments.
Planes Hit By Lightning (Score:3, Interesting)
Another amazing video is of a plane getting hit by lightning at a Japanese airport--check it here [noaa.gov].
Bottom line: planes can be just like a big hydrometeor from lightning's perspective.
Re:Sorry west coast? (Score:2)
Re:Sorry west coast? (Score:2)
Clarification - from original poster (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Sorry west coast? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes we do, actually. I was in LA a couple of months ago and the heat caused people to run their ACs. Result? Power reserves went really low. When that happens, rolling blackouts have to occur. The only reason the death toll isn't so high is that they are well prepared for it.
Can't say I blame you for being this misinformed, though. After living here for the last 3 months, I'm findnig some of the Californian stereotypes quite amusing
Re:Harnessing the power (Score:2)
Maybe a Delorean.......
Re:Harnessing the power (Score:5, Interesting)
When we in the University of Florida lightning research group [ufl.edu] trigger a lightning flash, we use a $500 rocket to get that US$0.30 worth of electricity. This alone makes the whole process very cost-ineffective. Add to this the fact that there is not a good way to store that much energy that quickly, and you quickly realize that it's simply not practical to try to store lightning energy.
I'll be glad to share more information, if anyone's interested.
Re:Harnessing the power (Score:4, Interesting)
We often strike a section of de-energized power line, with a (nominal) impedance of 400 ohms. That translates into peak voltage of 10 megavolts as a first approximation, and about 250 gigawatts. But, since the peak duration is no more than a couple of microseconds, that's about 500 kilowatt-seconds, and 138 watt-hours - less than a single kilowatt-hour.
Er - what do you do, to consider 25 kA "not much current"? Just wondering...
Re:Harnessing the power (Score:3, Interesting)
Our rockets themselves aren't that expensive, truthfully. And we can usually reuse the rocket proper, we just load a new motor in it. Those are cheap. What's expensive is the spool of wire attached to the rocket. You'd think that getting 700 m of 32 ga wire wra
Re:Harnessing the power (Score:2)
-Old jungle saying [geocities.com]-
So all that is needed is:
1. Hire Phantom [kingfeatures.com]
2. Wait for lightning to strike charging equipment
3. Make Phantom move indefinitely
4. ???
5. Profit!
Re:Show me the exit please (Score:2)
Re:Show me the exit please (Score:2)
Re:Show me the exit please (Score:5, Funny)
I'm curious about ball lightning... (Score:2)
Re:Lightning/Tornados or Earthquakes (Score:2)
Re:Lightning/Tornados or Earthquakes (Score:2)
The reason why the New Madrid quake was particularly bad (thanks for the examples) was the fact that there is a layer of bedrock underlying much of the area. So shock waves tend to travel much farther with greater inten