Lightning

Historic planetary instability and catastrophe. Evidence for electrical scarring on planets and moons. Electrical events in today's solar system. Electric Earth.

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kell1990
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Re: Is "ball lightning" simply scattered bead lightning?

Unread post by kell1990 » Sun Jun 03, 2012 9:19 pm

This afternoon, I actually went out to the specific area that was involved in this incident and measured the distance from where I was standing and where the "bolt" (leader?) emananted. It turns out to be about 13 feet, not 8 feet.

The direction of the "arc" was actually from the SE to the NW, and not S to N. The pine trees are still there and the height estimates are still valid.

Tomorrow, I will contact the local fire department as to the exact time and date of this incident.

This had to be the the most extreme meterological event I've ever seen. I have seen numerous "anvil" clouds; I have seen a couple of "lenticular" clouds: I have even seen 5 simulaneous waterspouis, flying into them in a helicopter; I have seen a "hole-punch" cloud; but I have never seen anything like this before or since.

The more I think about it and the more I research it, the more I think this was a segment of "bead lightning" that I saw traversing through the air that Tuesday afternoon..

I think what I saw was a segment of lightning, which I took to be an "arc", which it was, but I can't tie it to that amber ball that was dancing on the screw that mounted the phone company's service panel to the wall of my house.

I can only guess, at the moment, that these two things are related in some way, because of the simultaneouty of their occurrance. That's the best I can do for now.

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PersianPaladin
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Re: Is "ball lightning" simply scattered bead lightning?

Unread post by PersianPaladin » Mon Jun 25, 2012 9:20 am

Fascinating account there Kell.

Any other members have similar experiences?

celeste
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thunder easily explained

Unread post by celeste » Mon Nov 05, 2012 6:24 pm

Read this abstract: http://iopscience.iop.org/0022-3727/22/8/012/

Let's answer their questions with one word. Dethermalization

Yes, it's that easy. The flash of lightning is a flow of charge, with a radial electric field. That takes thermal energy in the surrrounding atmosphere and translates it to radial energy, causing the observed shockwave. ALL of their observations are explained!

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D_Archer
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by D_Archer » Tue Nov 06, 2012 3:45 am

And you can add that thermal energy is photon density.

Regards,
Daniel
- Shoot Forth Thunder -

celeste
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by celeste » Wed Nov 07, 2012 6:09 pm

Now read: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1987PASP...99.1115M
They need a mechanism to explain how dust and neutral gas(not ions), are efficiently lifted from a star in a bipolar(not spherical) manner. Looks a lot like the thunder problem, just on a larger scale.
I'll suggest that an increase in electric field of the star dethermalizes the surrounding gas. This takes the random thermal energy in the neutral gas and dust,and translates it to radial motion, and therefore outward pressure. If the current really does run through a star as in the EU model, this would explain the axial symmetry of the dust/neutral gas ejection.
So yes, Thornhill's model of stars is right, but he's forgotten the effect of dethermalization as outward pressure on neutrals. Correct me if I am wrong, but I did not see him mention it in his model of red giant shell ejections or pulsations.

celeste
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Catatumbo Lightning

Unread post by celeste » Fri Nov 09, 2012 11:00 am

Thanks breddy,et al. Catatumbo certainly deserves it's own thread. This is what we know now:
1. Catatumbo has had nearly continous lightning, except during a period of drought.
2. There has already been speculation that uranium in the surrounding bedrock plays a role.
3. Water reacts with uranium to produce hydrogen gas.
4. Radiation from uranium can make a gas highly conductive.
5. Lightning is current running between earth and sun.
6. Electric current is going to take the path of least resistance.
I don't think it should be too hard to see what's going on.

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Solar
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by Solar » Sat Nov 10, 2012 9:00 am

For some reason I want to place this here so as to assist with the concept being conveyed:
Charged particles do not experience external electrostatic forces when they are in the range b to c - within the photosphere. Only random thermal movement occurs due to diffusion. (Temperature is simply the measurement of the violence of such random movement.) This is where the ~ 6,000 K photospheric temperature is measured. Positive ions have their maximum electrical potential energy when they are in this photospheric granule plasma. But their mechanical kinetic energy is relatively low. At a point just to the left of point c, any random movement toward the right (radially outward - upward) that carries a + ion even slightly beyond point c will result in it's being swept away, down the energy hill, out of the Sun (toward the right in figure 1). Such movement of charged particles due to an E-field is called a 'drift current'. This drift current of accelerating positive ions is a constituent of the solar 'wind' (which is a serious misnomer). As positive ions begin to accelerate down the potential energy drop from point c through e, they convert the high (electrical) potential energy they had in the photosphere into kinetic energy - they gain extremely high outward radial velocity and lose side-to-side random motion. Thus, they become 'de-thermalized'. In this region, in the upper photosphere and the chromosphere, the movement of these ions becomes extremely organized (parallel). Therefore an observed temperature minimum occurs here. - Don Scott: The Electric Sun Hypothesis
Temperature is a measure of how much random kinetic energy the particles have, which is related to the rate of particle collisions and how fast they are moving. The temperature affects the degree of plasma ionization. Electric fields aligned (parallel) with local magnetic fields (“force-free” condition) can form in plasma. Particles accelerated in field-aligned conditions tend to move in parallel, not randomly, and consequently undergo relatively few collisions. The conversion of particle trajectories from random to parallel is called “dethermalization”. They are said to have a lower “temperature” as a result. Analogy: think of the vehicular motion in a “destruction derby” as “hot”, collision-prone random traffic, and freeway vehicular movement in lanes as “cool”, low-collision, parallel aligned traffic. - Essential Guide to the EU – Chapter 3 Plasma
Also:
The basis of Don Scott's explanation is that a charged particle in motion in a magnetic field experiences a force at right angles to its velocity vector, with a magnitude proportional to the particle's charge (Q), the velocity vector and the magnetic flux density: F = QU x B

The turning force applied by the magnetic field causes the charged particle to assume a circular motion around an imaginary field line, coupled with whatever axial motion it started out with when entering the field, if any. This leads to a path with a helical shape in 3D space. If the magnetic field changes direction, so too does the helical path of particles riding along it. The electric field potential (volts per meter) is what accelerates the particle parallel to the magnetic lines of equal potential, and where the axial energy increase comes from.

The local magnetic field of the plasma requires more energy from charged particles in motion to move transversely across the lines of magnetic potential than parallel to them. A force is applied to such particles (ions and electrons) to turn them away from their traversing the (imaginary) magnetic field lines and to continue to accelerate them parallel with the field lines. This velocity vector acceleration increases the magnetic field strength, which in turn is able to provide a higher resistance to particles' transverse velocity components.The more parallel they move, the fewer the number of collisions per unit time, and less energy involved in the few glancing, near-parallel collisions. This is dethermalization. Random or Brownian motion gets suppressed or minimized by the steering electromagnetic fields which "parallelize" their flow. The bulb of the ol' solar thermometer (moving with the flow) is not hit as often nor as hard, while the particles themselves stream faster and faster (have more kinetic energy in eV) along the field lines' direction - Re: "Why Lower Corona of the Sun Is Hotter Than the Photosphere"
Another example:
We present accelerated computational method for Coulomb collisions in a plasma, through significant improvements in our earlier hybrid method that combines a Monte Carlo particle simulation and a fluid dynamic solver in a single uniform method throughout phase space. We derive an improved formulation of the detailed balance constraint on the thermalization and dethermalization probabilities. We define a parameterized set of thermalization and dethermalization probabilities and optimize the choice of parameters to achieve the fastest computation time for a specified accuracy level. We mathematically analyze the validity of the thermalization and dethermalization step in the context of a simple drift-diffusion model that includes long range interactions as in Coulomb collisions. Finally, we formulate a higher order stochastic method for solving the drift diffusion model using a Milstein correction. - Accelerated Monte Carlo Methods for Coulomb Collisions
Okay, that last one may be a bit much but its funny how there can be so many terms to denote when electrical forces take charge of a situation to convey energy not associated with energy due to heat generated by random motion.
"Our laws of force tend to be applied in the Newtonian sense in that for every action there is an equal reaction, and yet, in the real world, where many-body gravitational effects or electrodynamic actions prevail, we do not have every action paired with an equal reaction." — Harold Aspden

seasmith
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by seasmith » Sat Nov 10, 2012 5:22 pm

... translates it to radial energy, causing the observed shockwave.
Celeste,

I agree with the shockwave concept (similar to your Quasar scenario), but wonder if the actual 'boom' of thunder is not that "shockwave" front cracking the sound barrier ?

s

hyrumpoint0
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Re: Catatumbo Lightning

Unread post by hyrumpoint0 » Sat Nov 10, 2012 6:07 pm

Had to look this up...where the Catatumbo River empties into the Maracaibo lake in Venezuela...I learned something today...Thanks

celeste
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by celeste » Mon Nov 12, 2012 12:33 pm

seasmith, the sound barrier in an electric field? now you've left me with more questions.
1. Scientists know that the speed of sound in a plasma (and other materials) is dependent on the electric field. They use helioseismology to determine what is happening in the sun based on sound waves at the surface. They are not allowing for any strong electric fields. So when they tell us that the sun has no significant s-waves (shear waves across the sun), are they just telling us what we already know? That the sun has a radial electric field, not a strong time-varying field across its surface?
2. when they look at shock waves in supernova remnants, they are not allowing for strong electric fields. But according to Thornhill,"supernovae are catastrophic electrical disharges focused on a star." Should'nt we be able to look at the remnant's shock waves and tell not only the electric field, but how the field is changing with time or distance from the supernova?
3. did the mainstream consider lightning's electric field in their explanations of thunders' speed of propagation?
4. Shock waves (or lack thereof) in the gas around quasars? Redshift of quasars as plasma or electron density in shockwaves?
I don't know any of this. Help!

seasmith
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by seasmith » Mon Nov 12, 2012 7:57 pm

Image
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hb ... oubar.html


I don't know either, but those pictures remind me of this:

Image
Dispersion and non-linearity can interact to produce permanent and localized wave forms. Consider a pulse of light traveling in glass. This pulse can be thought of as consisting of light of several different frequencies. Since glass shows dispersion, these different frequencies will travel at different speeds and the shape of the pulse will therefore change over time. However, there is also the non-linear Kerr effect: the refractive index of a material at a given frequency depends on the light's amplitude or strength. If the pulse has just the right shape, the Kerr effect will exactly cancel the dispersion effect, and the pulse's shape won't change over time: a soliton. See soliton (optics) for a more detailed description.
[note: dielectric permittivity can be a function of amplitude and/or frequency]s
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soliton


Regardless of what shocking wave is initiating a 'front', there are typically a host of impinging phases which, if driven with sufficient energy relative to the ambient space, will resolve into a more coherent form.
Phase velocities average into a group velocity, near-field radiations morph into a far-field carrier wave, ocean wavelets combine into traveling waves, and etc.
A sub-atomic analogy might be the transcending of a "band gap"?

A concept being considered here is that in an event where energetic emissions/radiations, at first diffuse, explosively fuse; the conjunctive energetic 'soliton' may re-radiate and assume a different mode of propagation.
~

celeste
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by celeste » Wed Nov 14, 2012 11:50 am

Now look at this:
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/62497
We know thunder has an outward pressure that can not be explained based on temperature alone.
And now they see a "significant, as yet undetected, non-thermal component to the pressure in the local cloud".
In the case of thunder, the mainstream already suspects that electrical forces in lightning are involved.
Could it be that electrical forces also contribute to the pressure in the local cloud, and by the the same mechanism?
That would mean that we would have to have some kind of current flowing through the local cloud. But large scale electrical currents in space? That's just crazy.

breddy
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Re: Catatumbo Lightning

Unread post by breddy » Fri Nov 16, 2012 9:20 am

The hundreds of years of persistent electrical activity seems to me to reflect an
electrical-mechanical dynamism that is either

a) part of the larger planetary circuit, possibly part of the South Atlantic anomaly
b) something unique to the local geography/geology/meteorology of the region
c) combinations of a and b

But I'm a bit of a dilettante with EU science, and supporting theories.

My background is more on the humanities and computer science side of things.

I was curious if more seasoned commentators had ever examined the phenomenon and
articulated a summary that describes the unusual history of the Catatumbo Maracaibo
'Lake of Lightning' behavior.

I'd love to see a Thunderbolts Picture of the Day (TPOD) write up on Catatumbo.

regards,
Barry Reddy

lifelong student, husband, father, unix system administrator, college instructor, etc

kiwi
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by kiwi » Mon Dec 10, 2012 6:45 pm

Hi Celeste :D ... interesting from an historical perspective regards Helmholtz in this doc, his name arises fairly often as a stoic defender of the faith in the "science" of the day ... not unlike the situation we have today? ... regardless of that, what do you make of this comment ...
For example, sound is not a vibration of the air. A sound wave, we know today, is an electromagnetic process involving the rapid assembly and disassembly of geometrical configurations of molecules. In modern physics, this kind of self-organizing process is known as a "soliton." Although much more detailed experimental work needs to be done, we know in principle that different frequencies of coherent solitons correspond to distinct geometries on the microscopic or quantum level of organization of the process. This was already indicated by the work of Helmholtz's contemporary, Bernhard Riemann, who refuted most of the acoustic doctrines of Helmholtz in his 1859 paper on acoustical shock waves.1 http://www.schillerinstitute.org/fid_91 ... _tune.html

(the word "Quantum" tends to scare me a bit as its usage defending Einsteins relativity has blurred I think the many valid distinctions possible with it's usage ... just the standard paranoia of anyone who has attempted to defend the EU in a mainstream forum? )

cheers

celeste
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Re: thunder easily explained

Unread post by celeste » Wed Dec 12, 2012 10:32 am

Kiwi, thanks for the link. I don't know what to make of it yet. Shame on me here. I've realized long ago that the mainstream was wrong on many fundamental assumptions(redshift is a measure of distance, gravity is the only force that matters on cosmic scales,space-time is curved,etc), and yet I never bothered to rethink the idea that sound is just a series of compressions and rarefactions of molecules. Oops. We know in the case of thunder, that sound is not just a spherically propagated wave front. We see planetary nebula that are seemingly shaped by sonic shock waves, without even considering that there are any electric fields present on that scale. Again, it's definitely worth rethinking from the ground up. Thanks again, C

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