Now I did find something from the NASA site about some lightning hitting the Eiffel Tower!! Can you believe it?? I thought you all would like to see this as well as I did. So here is the best picture I could find. It is a little blurry looking but still you can get a good idea..... Also here is a little something posted about this event. A rare phenomenon it was that is for sure!! Have another wonderful day Bloggers! I will check back soon....................
Believe it or not, bolts of lightning are shooting out of the Eiffel Tower. Photographer Hakim Atek caught it happening on May 25th:
"I saw some lightning out the window of my home in Paris," says Atek. "So I set up a tripod and pointed my camera at the Eiffel Tower. I never expected to get such an amazing picture."
But did the Tower really make its own lightning? The surprising answer is "yes."
"The upward branching in this photo shows that the Eiffel Tower actually initiated the discharge," says lightning researcher Richard Blakeslee of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. "In other words, instead of starting in the cloud and coming to ground, this flash started when the tower 'launched' a leader that propagated upward toward the cloud (which still served as the source of the electric field needed to get the process going). As the leader ascended, it branched out. Eventually one of the branches reached a region of sufficient charge to 'short out the cloud' and produce the return stroke pictured above."
"The upward branching in this photo shows that the Eiffel Tower actually initiated the discharge," says lightning researcher Richard Blakeslee of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. "In other words, instead of starting in the cloud and coming to ground, this flash started when the tower 'launched' a leader that propagated upward toward the cloud (which still served as the source of the electric field needed to get the process going). As the leader ascended, it branched out. Eventually one of the branches reached a region of sufficient charge to 'short out the cloud' and produce the return stroke pictured above."
According to Martin Uman's classic text The Lightning Discharge, upward-initiated discharges are "relatively rare," accounting for less than 1% of all lightning, "and generally occur from mountain tops and tall man-made structures." K. Berger, who studied lightning from a mountaintop location 30+ years ago, was one of the first to describe the phenomenon.
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Neat info on the Eiffel Tower!
ReplyDeleteIs a chilly morning, temp 51.4 humidity 87%. a lot of dew.
This is my first offical day of summer break, I woke at my normal time to get ready for work. Is going to be strange for awhile.
All enjoy your day!
Teri in Laf.
Is every one still sleeping in this cool weather, or are you all outside playing?
ReplyDeleteWhat a cool pic. Thanks for sharing Justin!
ReplyDeleteIt rained here for a few minutes but that was it so far today. I'm not looking forward to next weeks weather with the possible potential for severe weather. YUCK.
Everyone enjoy your weekend!
Angela
Nice brief and this fill someone in on helped me alot in my college assignement. Say thank you you as your information.
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