Eyjafjallajokull volcano lightning
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1449
- Joined: Wed Apr 14, 2010 6:54 pm
- Location: Why no Krom I didn't know you can have 100 characters in this box.
Eyjafjallajokull volcano lightning
Eyjafjallajokull volcano emits lightning bolts. I think that is awesome stuff right there.
- Sergeant Thorne
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4641
- Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2001 3:01 am
- Location: Indiana, U.S.A.
Re:
Yeah, Falcore. The Luck Dragon. (long bodied huge flying ... dog) Hey, I got kids.Duper wrote:is it me, or does that middle picture look like that dog/dragon from Never ending story?
Re:
AAahhh. Thanks. It was right the tip of my tongue. Those are some really awesome picts.TechPro wrote:Yeah, Falcore. The Luck Dragon. (long bodied huge flying ... dog) Hey, I got kids.Duper wrote:is it me, or does that middle picture look like that dog/dragon from Never ending story?
Nice post Heri.
Bing had a nice one too: http://www.bing.com/fd/hpk2/IcelandErup ... 775224.jpg
Doesn't even look real... but there you are.
Doesn't even look real... but there you are.
- EngDrewman
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 232
- Joined: Mon Oct 13, 2008 12:01 am
- Location: Sacramento, CA
- Contact:
Basically, you have a bunch of tiny ash particles rubbing against each other at high speeds and building up a massive charge of static electricity, just as ice particles do in a normal thunderstorm. Eventually, the charge becomes strong enough that it discharges between oppositely-charged regions of the ash cloud.
Re:
yup yup!Top Gun wrote:Basically, you have a bunch of tiny ash particles rubbing against each other at high speeds and building up a massive charge of static electricity, just as ice particles do in a normal thunderstorm. Eventually, the charge becomes strong enough that it discharges between oppositely-charged regions of the ash cloud.
we had the same thing with Mt. Saint Helen's in 1980. (its about 30 miles away.)
Yes the new science of lightning is very confusing, the conventional theory is…
Electrons always flow from negative to positive, so the flow of electrons in a lightning strike is from the negatively charged clouds to the ground.
The new science is that it's the “holes” (positive charges) that make the flash…not the flow of electrons.
And, I have also heard that the earth is positively charged, but the surface is negatively charged…
So go figure.
Electrons always flow from negative to positive, so the flow of electrons in a lightning strike is from the negatively charged clouds to the ground.
The new science is that it's the “holes” (positive charges) that make the flash…not the flow of electrons.
And, I have also heard that the earth is positively charged, but the surface is negatively charged…
So go figure.
- Krom
- DBB Database Master
- Posts: 16138
- Joined: Sun Nov 29, 1998 3:01 am
- Location: Camping the energy center. BTW, did you know you can have up to 100 characters in this location box?
- Contact:
The earth is positively charged, the atmosphere is negatively charged (typically). The direction of the current flow of most lightning strikes is from the sky to the ground. However the way a lightning bolt visibly propagates when it fans out often appears to start from the ground and then spread higher and wider. This is because its the plasma created by the previous flash gives other charged regions of the cloud a lower resistance path to ground and the process of connecting all these regions and segments isn't instant.
The bolt first flashes where the initial connection to the ground is, that segment of the bolt is then discharged, but the plasma remains for a moment and provides a long conductor from the ground into the cloud for further charged regions to arc to. Now a branch of the bolt or the fan can be close enough that it too will make a connection to the plasma and then discharge, the whole length of plasma from that point back to the ground will then flare up again with the addition of the new branch, that will also provide the same effect to even more branches further along its own path. So the visible effect makes it appear like the bolt starts at the ground and spreads up and out, but the current can still be flowing from the cloud into the ground.
The bolt first flashes where the initial connection to the ground is, that segment of the bolt is then discharged, but the plasma remains for a moment and provides a long conductor from the ground into the cloud for further charged regions to arc to. Now a branch of the bolt or the fan can be close enough that it too will make a connection to the plasma and then discharge, the whole length of plasma from that point back to the ground will then flare up again with the addition of the new branch, that will also provide the same effect to even more branches further along its own path. So the visible effect makes it appear like the bolt starts at the ground and spreads up and out, but the current can still be flowing from the cloud into the ground.