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Ball Lightning Exists …But What On Earth Is It?

Sunday, November 4, 2012 18:49
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(Before It's News)

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You’d probably get a bit of a fright if ball lightning started moving through your house. Wikimedia Commons

Ball lightning is one of the strangest phenomena on our planet. It’s usually seen during thunderstorms as a ball of light about the size of a grapefruit, with the intensity of roughly a 40W light bulb. It moves at about walking speed, roughly a metre above the ground, and lasts about ten seconds.

It’s been seen by hundreds of people for hundreds of years in almost every country of the world – but has remained something of a mystery. Put simply, we don’t know what it is, what provides its energy, or why it moves independently of any breeze.

But my colleagues and I have published a new paper that should shed some light on this mysterious phenomenon and bring us one step closer to understanding, definitively, what ball lightning is.

A bright history

My association with ball lightning began in the 1960s when I was working for Westinghouse Research Laboratories in Pittsburgh in the USA – working on the theory of cooling air formed from electric arcs in circuit breakers.

Next to my office was the office of physicist Martin Uman who now, having written three text books on lightning, is regarded as the world’s leading lightning scientist.

One day, over coffee, Martin mentioned that ball lightning was one of the very few phenomena we don’t understand at all, despite having been seen by hundreds, maybe thousands of people.

I replied that I thought ball lightning was just hot air produced from a lightning strike – the ball of hot air being so large that it cooled only slowly, giving it a lifetime of seconds (rather than the fraction of a second a lightning strike lasts for).

Several months later, Martin came back from one of his trips to Washington with a contract from the US Air Force for me to research ball lightning. I presume the US Air Force were interested to be able to make ball lightning and use it in the Vietnam War to scare the Viet Cong!

 

But there was a problem with my “hot air” theory: hot air rises and ball lightning does not generally rise. In 1969, after the contract period had expired, my colleagues and I concluded we still had no idea what ball lightning was.

Yet we wrote a paper, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, entitled Toward a theory of Ball Lightning, in which we explained ball lightning could not just be hot air because hot air rises.

Lighting up the house

While many sightings of ball lightning have been made outdoors, it is also seen inside houses. In fact a recent French survey of 350 sightings in France found far more observations of ball lightning inside houses than outside (181 to 94).

Perhaps even scarier, ball lightning has been seen inside of aeroplanes.

Luckily, it seems the ball lightning that appears inside of houses and aeroplanes is harmless and no injuries have been reported. I’ve heard one report of ball lightning in a plane passing right through or around an air hostess as it travelled down the central aisle of the plane.

(By contrast, outdoor ball lightning has been seen to initiate very damaging lightning strikes.)

So how do these balls of lightning get inside houses and aeroplanes? And why does ball lightning almost always move?


Nineteenth century depiction of “Ball Lightning crossing a kitchen and barn” published in “L’Atmosphere”, C. Flammarion, 1873, Paris, and reproduced in “The Lightning Discharge”, by M.A. Uman, Academic Press, New York, 1987, courtesy of Burndy library.  

People claim to have seen ball lightning entering a house through a closed glass window, yet subsequent examination of the window reveals no damage or even discolouration of the glass.

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  • About 15 years ago I had my one and only experience with ball lightning. It was during a thunderstorm. I had the door to our front porch open but the screen door was closed. As described above, a grapefruit sized ball of light came from the direction of the screen door and very slowly drifted across the room. I estimate maybe took 10 seconds. As the ball lightning reached the center of the room it came in contact with a metal light fixture hanging from the ceiling. when it struck the light it exploded and the sound of the loudest thunder you could ever imagine rang through out the room. My ears were still ringing an hour later. It was the strangest, most terrifying and interesting phenomena I have ever witnessed myself.

    • Shocking but fascinating anecdote. Thanks for sharing it.

  • Get laid

  • Ball Lightning is a known and scientifically recognised natural phenomena. We know it exists and I pity the brainless idiots that think otherwise. Its as certain as vote fraud in the election (but there is always someone who says it doesnt happen)

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