Home › Forum Online Discussion › General › Ball Lightning Image from eye-witness Katie Dvali account
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October 10, 2010 at 3:14 am #35531
In the site Odnoklassniki.ru I have organized the group of eye-witness accounts about BALL-LIGHTNINGS
Georgian woman now living in USA tells me her eye-witness account:
“The ball was size of 13cm…It was blue inside and deeper was turning in dark blue,which close to the center was almost purple like color.All the colors were turning slowly in one direction.The pink shinee line around the ball also was turning…The ball was moving very gently,slowly.I was watching this beauty approximately one minute and then disappear through the window of the plane.” etc.
I have tried to draw this image and here it is:
October 12, 2010 at 12:10 am #35532October 13, 2010 at 12:11 am #35534the spins on the lightning should be tracing out letter patterns…
Latin characters are largely two-d planar intersections with 3d tetrahedral grids
but cursive spin together
[DISCLAIMER: THESE ARE THE OPINIONS OF THE AUTHOR, INCLUDING ALL ALLUSIONS TO JETPACKS]
October 13, 2010 at 12:32 am #35536October 18, 2010 at 2:54 pm #35538October 18, 2010 at 4:04 pm #35540October 23, 2010 at 5:43 am #35542October 23, 2010 at 4:57 pm #35544One of the strangest and least understood weather phenomena. Seemingly a close cousin of earthlights, or earthquake lights, though with some distinctive properties of its own, ball lightning crops up in the most unexpected places. In a letter to the journal Nature physicist Richard Jennison gave this remarkable eyewitness account:
I was seated near the front of the passenger cabin of an all-metal airliner (Eastern Airlines Flight EA 539) on a late night flight from New York to Washington. The aircraft encountered an electrical storm during which it was enveloped in a sudden bright and loud electrical discharge (0005h EST, March 19, 1963). Some seconds after this, a glowing sphere a little more than 20 centimeters in diameter emerged from the pilot’s cabin and passed down the aisle of the aircraft approximately 50 centimeters from me, maintaining the same height and course for the whole distance over which it could be observed.
Jennings went on to say that it was blue-white in color, gave off no heat as far as he could tell and glided along at walking pace about two-and-a-half feet from the floor.
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/B/ball_lightning.html
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