[meteorite-list] Ball Lightning May Explain Some Fireball Sighting
From: Steve Dunklee <steve.dunklee_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 4 Dec 2010 07:57:16 -0800 (PST) Message-ID: <304469.82583.qm_at_web113908.mail.gq1.yahoo.com> this sounds like good science to me. Lightning can be produced by volcanos. Plate tecktonics and other phenomenom. So why not from the energy of a fireball? Cheers Steve On Fri Dec 3rd, 2010 7:00 PM EST Ron Baalke wrote: > >http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11877842 > >Ball lightning 'may explain UFOs' >By Jonathan Amos >BBC News >November 30, 2010 > >Some UFO sightings could be explained by ball lightning and other >atmospheric phenomena, claims Australian astrophysicist Stephen Hughes. > >The scientist has made a detailed study of an unusual event in 2006 when >large meteors were observed over Brisbane. > >Their appearance occurred at the same time as a brilliant green object >was seen to roll over nearby mountains. > >Dr Hughes has put forward a theory linking the object - presumed to be >ball lighting - to the fireballs. > >His idea is that one of the fireballs may have momentarily triggered an >electrical connection between the upper atmosphere and the ground, >providing energy for the ball lightning to appear above the hills. > >He has written up his explanation <http://eprints.qut.edu.au/38939/> in >a journal of the Royal Society <http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/>. > >Dr Hughes says the extraordinary episode, which occurred during a night >of fine weather, is just the sort of happening that might lead some to >think they had witnessed UFO activity. > >"If you put together inexplicable atmospheric phenomena, maybe of an >electrical nature, with human psychology and the desire to see something >- that could explain a lot of these UFO sightings," he told BBC News. > >Rendering of fireball Eyewitnesses were asked to draw what they saw. >This is how graphic designer David Sawell recalled a fireball > >The scientist, who is a senior lecturer at the Queensland University of >Technology, initiated the study after being called in by the local TV >station to look over and explain photos of the fireballs captured by >members of the public on camera phones. > >Fireballs are exceptionally bright meteors and are produced by fragments >of space rock larger than the sand-grain-sized particles responsible for >shooting stars; but like shooting stars they cross the sky at great speed. > >It seems at least three individual fireballs were seen on the night of >16 May 2006. > >Fireball over Brisbane (Roy Soc) This photo gives a sense of the intense >brightness of one of the fireballs > >A subsequent survey organised by the university brought forward many >more eyewitnesses, including a farmer who recalled seeing a luminous >green ball rolling down a slope of the Great Divide, a mountainous ridge >about 120km west of Brisbane. > >This object described as being about 30cm in diameter appeared to jump >over some rocks and follow the path of a metal fence for "some minutes". >The farmer said he saw the green object come into view just after a >fireball had passed overhead. > >He thought at first he was witnessing a plane crash and called the >police, but a search the following day found no wreckage. > >Ball lightning seems an obvious explanation, says Dr Hughes. These >bright, hovering spheres of light are not fully understood. They are >known to be associated with thunderstorms, but not always, and there was >certainly no electrical storm activity in the vicinity of the Great Divide. > >Dr Hughes does not offer a new explanation for the causes of ball >lightning, merely how enough energy might have been put into the ground >to trigger it. > >He proposes that the natural flow of current that exists between the >upper-most reaches of the atmosphere, the ionosphere, and the ground was >increased by the passage of the meteor that streamed charged particles >and other conductive materials in its wake. > >The Great Divide The ball lightning was seen to roll down the slope >following the line of a wire fence > >"Could it be that the meteor descending through the atmosphere, having >passed through the ionosphere, actually created a transient conductive >connection between the ionosphere and the ground, even if it was only >for a few seconds? Was that enough to put charge into the ground, and >then with the discharge form some kind of plasma ball above? > >"Think of the ionosphere and the ground as the terminals on the battery >and you put a wire between those two terminals and current flows, and >literally you get a spark." > >Other scientists have suggested that charges dissipating through the >ground can create balls of glowing ionised gas above it. > >Dr John Abrahamson from the University of Canterbury, NZ, championed the >idea 10 years ago that ball lightning consisted of vaporised mineral >grains kicked out of the soil by a conventional lightning strike, an >idea later tested with some success by Brazilian researchers. > >He described Dr Hughes' work as "relatively feasible" and something >which made "interesting connections". > >"There's a long way to go before everyone will be happy and satisfied >that we have a full solution," he told BBC News. > >Dr Hughes said his publication in Proceedings of the Royal Society A: >Mathematical and Physical Sciences was intended to start a debate. > >"It's not a vigorous theory; it's more a suggestion that may be worth >exploring," he said. >______________________________________________ >Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html >Meteorite-list mailing list >Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Sat 04 Dec 2010 10:57:16 AM PST |
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