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Sparks and Lightning(C)1996 William BeatyWhile attempting to explain sparks and lightning to some friends, I realized that I didn't have a good gut-level understanding of them myself. As usual, my lack of understanding was an attractive irritant, like a pimple that one can't help picking at. And so over many months I kept noticing concepts that could be applied to explanations of sparks. Here's what I've come up with. To get a good understanding of sparks, you need to encounter their behavior in detail. One way to do this would be to magnify a small spark, but sparks happen so quickly that interesting behavior can't be seen, so in addition to magnifying it, we'd have to slow it down somehow. Here's a better idea: speed yourself up instead. Imagine that you've been exposed to Scalosian water from 'Old Trek.' This is the substance which causes you to live many times faster than normal. (TV-show science fiction trivia experts will recall the appearance of a similar hyper-speed drug on The Wild Wild West as well!) And then, instead of magnifying a tiny spark, let's go outside during a storm and look at the behavior of an already-large spark. Except for its size, the strange behavior of lightning is very similar to the behavior of tiny sparks.
So, we're standing outside in the time-frozen world of a raging
thunderstorm viewed from our 1000X perceptual acceleration. The trees and
bushes around us are thrashing frozenly in the stopped wind, and a few
torn shingles flying from the nearby roof hang in the air nearby. Higher
up we see a tangled, branching network of dimly glowing wiggly purple
lines which look something like a tree root. And like a root, all the
tips of the branches are lengthening. But this can't be lightning, it's
dim and purple, not bright blue-white.
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One branch-tip is about a hundred feet up from where we're standing. We
can see that the wiggly line isn't moving, it's only growing at its tip.
It takes a tortuous, kinky path as it lengthens, and occasionally a new
branch
starts growing from the side of the main one at a spot where there is a
particularly sharp bend. Then we notice something else: everything on the
ground is starting to glow. Bits of dim purple fire are popping into
existence on the tops of bushes, the edges of the roof of the nearby
house, the tips of the rooftop TV antenna, on the ends of all the tree
branches, and even on the flying pieces of roof shingles. As the
exploring finger of dim purple lightning comes downward, the purple "fire"
on all the objects becomes more and more intense. If you hold your hand
in front of you, the tips of all your fingers spout dim purple fire as
well.
Now the dim purple lightning from above is about thirty feet away, and the
downward growth of its tip seems to be speeding up. Then something really
disturbing happens. One of the purple flames coming from your fingers has
suddenly started growing upward as a narrow wiggly violet line! You pull
your hand down, but it's too late, the streamer of purple stays attached
and grows upward fast, it's two feet long by now. You notice that this
purple streamer from your hand isn't the only one, there are now jagged
purple lines growing upwards from many places which formerly had the
little "St. Elmo's Fire" flames. There's a ten foot streamer coming from
the tree, another from the bush, and a couple from the roof of the house
and the TV antenna. They appear to be moving towards the incoming
lightning strike. There are even several coming from the wind-blown
shingles, but some of these are extending downwards towards the ground
while others grow upwards. The one from you're hand isn't winning, it
apparently had a late start, and the streamers coming from the tree and
the shingles are really shooting upwards now ahead of all the others. And
the downwards-growing streamer from the shingles has touched the ground
and is spreading out into a small disk of purple rootlets on the surface
of the ground.
Finally the upward-growing streamer from the shingles approaches the
lightning streamer coming from above. The two growing branch-tips race
together, and just before they meet they split into several separate
branches which all connect. And NOW it suddenly looks like lightning,
because the entire streamer from the shingles is glowing brighter and
brighter. The little disk of purple filaments where it touches the ground
is now several feet across and looks like blazing blue-white tree roots.
The whole thing is far too bright to look at, and it's getting brighter
still. And something is happening to you. Your fingers hurt, the muscles
in your arm are tensing by themselves, and you feel yourself blacking out.
As you lose consciousness, you note that the short, dead-end streamer from
your hand is still jutting upwards into the air, glowing bright blue,
though nowhere near as brightly as the streamer from the shingles.
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What the heck was all that?! Lightning struck an object hanging in the
air?! Well, sort of, since the shingles somehow launched their own
lightning. And how could lightning be coming from objects on the ground,
and from your hand? Why were you knocked unconscious even though you
didn't get struck directly by the main bolt? And isn't lightning supposed
to travel at the speed of light? 1000 times speedup is nothing compared
to lightspeed, so why did we see the lightning as a bunch of
slowly-growing filaments?
There are some mental tricks you can use to understand some of what went
on above. Number one: realize that lightning is not made of electricity.
"Lightning is electricity" is a false concept which stands in your way of
understanding, and you need to get rid of it before you can figure out
what's going on. The long purple filaments which extended through the air
are not electricity, they are actually made of air. They are nitrogen and
oxygen which has been converted into plasma. Plasma is vaguely like fire,
but it is not necessarily hot. When air is converted to plasma, the
electrons of the gas atoms are knocked off the atoms and become able to
flow along through the air. Plasma is a conductor, so it's not too wrong
to think of purple plasma filaments as being like wires made of
conductive air.
Another mental trick: when you take a conductive object, a metal bar for
example, and hold it in a strong electric field, flame-like "St. Elmo's
Fire" sprouts from the ends of the bar. The "fire" is nitrogen/oxygen
plasma. And plasma itself IS a conductive object. So, if an electric
field is strong enough, and if a tiny bit of air is somehow converted into
plasma, it's as if your conductive rod has grown little conductive pieces
on its ends. And next, the "sharp" parts of the plasma globs will
themselves sprout extra bits of plasma. And so your metal rod has started
"lengthening itself" via fingers of air-plasma. The air can "catch fire"
with an outbreak of plasma which grows and grows, with more air turning to
plasma as the rods of plasma grow more plasma on their tips.
The plasma takes a particular form: long thin twisty rods. This occurs
because "St. Elmo's Fire" always starts on the sharpest part of an object,
and the sharpest part of a rod is the end of the rod. And so a pre-
existing rod of plasma will grow more plasma on its tips and lengthen
itself. This self-forming plasma conductor is vaguely like a motorized
metal antenna on a car which extends upwards. But the plasma-antenna can
lengthen itself continuously as long as it's tip is still in a strong
electrostatic field.
If the twisted plasma rod should make a sharp bend as it grows, the bend
can behave as a sharp point and more plasma fingers can take off from the
bend. In this way a lengthening plasma streamer develops branches as it
goes. Growing plasma doesn't just form twisted rods, it often forms
trees, it forms entire complicated systems of rootlets which advance and
spread. Whether it forms trees or straight unbent paths depends on the
shape of the e-field. in the space around it. A parallel e-field will
allow tree-shapes to grow. A spreading, radial-shaped field will tend to
force one plasma finger to grow faster than all the others, resulting in a
needle-straight spark.
Since plasma is a conductor, what do you think would happen if a piece of
air-plasma were to connect itself between two highly-charged objects
having opposite charge? ZAP! The opposite charges would be shorted out.
An enormous electric current would exist for a moment. This is what
happens during a lightning strike, or during the tinyest spark. Long
filaments of air-plasma within the clouds extend and explore downwards
towards the ground and upwards into the charged raindrops. A system of
fine plasma-rootlets develops which connects most of the raindrops to the
main conductive plasma tree structure. When the conductive plasma touches
the ground, it discharges both the charge on itself and the charge on the
the huge number of electrically charged raindrops. The large momentary
electric current makes the dim purple plasma explode with light and sound.
So, what about lightning and the speed of light? Why can we see lightning
"strike" across the clouds, yet light itself moves so fast that we never
see moving light beams? Why can we sometimes see sparks jump from object
to
object? This is because the growing motion of lightning and sparks is
actually
the growth of plasma filaments. It is not a movement of light. Lightning
can "strike" slow or fast depending on how fast the plasma filament tips
are extending themselves. In very large Tesla Coil systems, the
giant sparks
can lengthen VERY slowly, a human can sometimes outrun them.
In the speed-up story at the top of this page, how come there were plasma
filaments appearing on the ground and growing upwards? And why did the
wind-blown shingles send plasma filaments both up AND down? This is hard
to explain without going into detail about electric fields and atoms. But
here's a similar question: suppose you squeeze a clod of dirt between your
thumb and forefinger until it cracks. Would you expect the crack to start
at your thumb, or at your finger? Or might it start from a small spot in
the dirt and grow outwards in two directions at once? In truth, applying
force to the dirtball can cause a crack to start ANYWHERE within the dirt.
Cracks tend to start at defects, and a similar thing is true with
lightning and sparks. An invisible field of electric force, if applied to
air, can cause plasma filaments to burst into existence anywhere in the
part of the air where the field exists. When lightning is advancing
towards the
ground, there is a strong
electric field all through the air around the plasma branch and in
the space above the surface of the earth. This strong field can trigger
new plasma filaments to grow anywhere. Of course its main effect is to
make the
main lightning filament lengthen and grow downwards. But those blowing
shingles represented
a "defect" in the air, they distort the invisible electrostatic field in
the air and strengthened it near the shingles, just as a bubble in
stressed
glass can distort the mechanical forces and initiate a crack in the glass.
The electric field present throughout
the air caused two plasma dendrites to take off from the shingle and
"strike"
simultaneously upwards and downwards. The defect in the air caused the
air to "crack" electrically, the crack being made of 3D plasma filaments.
The
same thing happens when
aircraft fly between oppositely charged parts of a thunderstorm: the plane
acts as a triggering defect in the air, and plasma fingers launch
themselves from two spots on the airplane. Flying a plane near a
thunderstorm is like poking a highly-stressed windowpane with a nail: the
cracks start where the nail touches. Yes, that's right, research
has shown that aircraft rarely
are struck by lightning, instead the aircraft themselves do the striking,
since
the plasma starts on the wingtips and zips outwards, striking the clouds.
BREAKING NEWS 2008
Also see Tom Warner's other lightning videos:
ZT RESEARCH youtube
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Lightning Strike Survivors SEE: LIGHTNING WEBRING |