Lightning rocket used to trigger lightning.
Previously:
Lightning strikes transformer - GIF
SUV hit by lightning - GIF
Lighting hits firework - GIF
Colliding lightning bolts - GIF
Man struck by lightning - GIF
Lightning rocket used to trigger lightning.
Previously:
Lightning strikes transformer - GIF
SUV hit by lightning - GIF
Lighting hits firework - GIF
Colliding lightning bolts - GIF
Man struck by lightning - GIF
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Inner (Jun 3, 2022), nova_robotics (Jun 2, 2022), Ralphxyz (Jun 5, 2022), rlm98253 (Jun 4, 2022)
I bought a fulgurite for my display case. It's a tube left when lightning strikes sand. I couldn't find any information on how they make them, but I had imagined it was a frame with electrodes down to beach sand, then they fire a rocket similar to this to stimulate a lightning strike.
...or they just glue sand together and I got scammed. One or the other.
Frank S (Jun 2, 2022)
nova_robotics (Jun 2, 2022)
From Das Wikipedia:
A lightning rocket is a rocket that unravels a conductor, such as a fine copper wire, as it ascends, to conduct lightning charges to the ground. Lightning strikes derived from this process are called "triggered lightning.
Design
A conducting lightning rod is grounded and positioned alongside the launch tube in communication with the conductive path to thereby control the time and location of a lightning strike from the thundercloud.[4] The conductor trailed by the rocket can be either a physical wire, or column of ionized gas produced by the engine. A lightning rocket using solid propellant may have cesium salts added, which produces a conductive path when the exhaust gases are discharged from the rocket. In a liquid propellant rocket a solution of calcium chloride is used to form the conductive path.
The system consists of a specially designed launch pad with lightning rods and conductors attached.[5] The launch pad is either controlled wirelessly or via pneumatic line to the control station to prevent the discharge traveling to the control equipment. The fine copper wire (more recently reinforced with kevlar) is attached to the ground and plays out from the rocket as it ascends. The initial strike follows this wire and is as a result unusually straight. As the wire is vaporized by the initial strike, subsequent strikes are more angular in nature and follow the ionization trail of the initial strike. Rockets of this type are used for both lightning research and lightning control.
rlm98253 (Jun 4, 2022), Toolmaker51 (Jun 3, 2022)
Sometimes a rocket getting lightning is definitely not a good thing. In 1969 Apollo 12 got hit by lightning (twice) during it's ascent. It was a scary minute, traveling with 7 million pounds of thrust behind you and suddenly the control panels go crazy. The story reads like a movie: https://history.nasa.gov/afj/ap12fj/...ingstrike.html
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