One of the
often-cited explanations for alleged UFO sightings is ball lightning, a
rare natural phenomenon which remains somewhat of an unsolved mystery
despite centuries of reports and several attempts by scientists to
explain it. The unexplained electrical phenomenon appears as luminous
orbs ranging from pea-sized to several meters across that can last up to
several seconds. Reports of ball lightning are often connected to
thunderstorms, but not always. There are numerous reports of ball
lightning floating straight through walls, dancing around ship masts,
traveling down electrical lines, or even inside submarines.
It’s generally accepted that ball
lightning is some unknown type of electrical discharge that can form
under certain specific circumstances, but its true nature remains
somewhat of a mystery. The latest scientific study to take a stab at the
ball lightning phenomenon was published this month in Optik,
a scientific journal devoted to the research of optics, light, and
electrons. In this current research, Vladimir Torchigin from the Russian
Academy of Sciences claims that ball lightning isn’t lightning at all,
but instead a “bubble of light” trapped inside a thin sphere of air.
As it turns out, whenever any
particle absorbs and emits electromagnetic radiation, it ‘jiggles’
slightly from the force. This latest research claims that whenever
traditional lightning strikes, it can cause air molecules to jiggle in
just the right way to trap photons in a rotating pressurized sphere of
air if just the right conditions are met. According to the study, the
“intensity of the rotating light is more than a billion times greater
than that of the light propagating in a straight line,” leading to ball
lightning’s incredible luminosity.
Torchigin seems pretty confident that he’s finally solved the ball lightning mystery, writing
that “we have shown that the behavior of a light bubble and ball
lightning are the same, and there are no mysteries in the behavior of
ball lightning. The question of the nature of ball lightning resolved.”
Has the mystery actually been solved?
Whether or not it has, I’m all for
this research – think about it: if we can learn the mechanism by which
ball lightning is created, we could theoretically find ways to create it
for ourselves. Remember that weird story about Russia’s secret “dome of light” weapon? Sounds pretty familiar. Could we harness these “bubbles of light” to create our own ball lightning?
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