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Numerous video links, so check 'em out.<br /><br />Link....<br /><br /><blockquote><font class="small">In reply to:</font><hr /><p><b>Video Reveals 'Sprite' Lightning Secrets<br /><br /><i>By Dave Mosher, LiveScience Staff Writer</i></b><br /><br />Sprites dance high above thunderstorms, but they’re not furtive mythical creatures. They’re quick bursts of electricity that have left atmospheric scientists in the dark about their origins.<br /><br />New ultra-high-speed video shows sprites form as fast-paced balls of electricity, not streaks or tendrils as previous footage suggested.<br /><br />The discovery challenges current theories of how mysterious sprites form and could lead to new understanding of atmospheric chemistry. The findings are detailed in this month’s issue of the journal Geophysical Research Letters.<br /><br />Young mystery<br /><br />Researchers predicted the existence of sprites as early as 1920, but direct evidence materialized only in 1989, when scientists testing a new low-light camera accidentally videotaped the bursts high above thunderstorms. Since then, atmospheric scientists have learned lightning below storm clouds is responsible for creating sprites above.<br /><br />“When the lightning strikes, an imbalance of charge forms between the storm cloud and the air above it,†said Hans Nielsen, an atmospheric physicist at the University of Alaska and co-author of the new study. Nature’s way of evening things out, he explained, is a rapid discharge of electricity—a sprite—that can extend as much as 20 miles upward.<br /><br />In the night sky, sprites can briefly outshine all other objects. “You could, theoretically, see them in daylight,†Nielsen said.<br /><br />Standard high-speed video can record sprites at 1,000 frames per second (fps), or about 16 times faster than a standard camcorder. But sprites are so transient that they last for only a few frames</p></blockquote> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> </div>