there is an easy experiment we can perform to see if lightning is intelligent. Here, you hold this kite string, and I'll take notes under this pointy metalic looking tree.
That explains why you get the buzzing feeling when there’s about to be a strike near you. If you are outside in a storm and feel that “static” feeling there’s about to be a hit near you.
you ever rub a balloon through your hair, or at least seen someone with long hair have it done to them? if it happened to you did it have a peculiar feeling around your head and the balloon and/or if you did it to someone else noticed the hair reach for the balloon? This is a static difference in charge, and that feeling is it being attracted to each other and reaching out, as you may imagine that is near literally nothing compared to lightning and the great imbalance of charge involved Basically the same feeling of being attracted to the air around you and the tingling from electric charges reaching out (remember, at least a good portion of nerve commutation to brain is electrical in nature) happens near where lightning will strike as the negative charge of the clouds starts reaching for the grounds positive charge, and that positive charge may "decide" to choose you as part of the path
Exactly. I had one hit a tree next to me. Im talking split seconds before it happened all my hair on my arms stood up and skin went all goose bumpy then crack and the swearing started shortly after hahaha
You really can't enjoy watching a storm without the lightning, at sunset during a summer storm watching the lightning light up the inside of the clouds, better than any fireworks show
One of the main reasons I love Colorado. The storms out here are incredible, and every summer, the lightning that you described is absolutely worth grabbing a chair, a beer, and watching the show. Nothing puts into perspective the power of mother nature like a high-altitude lightning storm.
A lightening strike at a distance is most beautiful when seen from the air. As I returned from a cross country flight done as part of private pilot training and my home rural airfield and its pattern were in sight I saw a strike from a cloud to the ground in the distance. It was clear enough that I could see the entire bolt and it was one of the most impressive phenomena I have had the pleasure of seeing while doing light plane flying.
Unfettered 'energy' ie lightning can rise to millions of volts because it's not restricted by anything just like a dead short in a 400kv substation to earth.
@@hrgwea ehh, its a bit different. Rivers all flow into one main stream, while lightning "veins" out from a central source. You'll very rarely see rivers splitting like that
@Tahu Nuva, the river is the result after the water already found the path of least resistance. You rarely see a lighting splitting in two, because that requires that two paths are found. So, the two processes are identical, the only difference is the speed at which they occur.
The fact that the original comment was made 34 years ago that I’m replying to really shows how advanced we’ve become since. Now things like this recording Slo-Mo Lightning can be done not on a phone but on a banana!
@@MadScientist267 I don't think there is anything elegant about algorithms, just the opposite. Nature is elegant, the brain is elegant whereas an algorithm to recognize faces is brute force digital computation.
@@billdberger7407 Hate to say it but there's nothing elegant about a lightning strike. That's more pissed off electrons trying to get from one place to another, a really good distance apart at that, *NOW* It may be efficient, beautiful, mesmerising, potent, spontaneous, bright, loud, violent... Probably a few others that aren't immediately coming to mind... But elegant isn't on my list. It is however, far as I'm concerned, nature's most impressive "single" release of energy on this planet, I can absolutely give it that.
I remember watching this series as a kid and being fascinated by all the stuff our planet is capable of. Volcanoes, Hurricanes, Lightning, Tornadoes, Earthquakes, Tsunamis, Floods... those are the VHS tapes I had...
The feelers that come out of the ground, looking to connect with the bolt, are to me the most amazing thing. Because I doubt many of us not in this field of work, were aware that this is how lightning makes contact with objects on the ground or in the sky. It was awesome to see several of them still sticking out of the ground, even after the lightning from the cloud had already made a connection. They looked Almost like electrical garden eels!! Amazing!!
Imagine if it was slow in real life if you are gonna get hit by lightning you will see a +ive stream on you head lol And that's when you know you are fkd
@04dram04 💯💯💯 true! I think it's maybe because everything is made by the same guy.. there seems to be patterns in everything..even space just my opinion not forcing this on anyone ✌️😘
I had a positive streamer come up through me once. The brilliant blue flowed out of my hand and into a truck I was next to. Every muscle in that arm contracted instantly and painfully. The main bolt arced over head and hit the ground. I told the ER physician how lucky I felt to have survived and for a split second was PLASMA MAN!
The best lightning show I ever saw was on a plane flying high above the clouds over the Pacific in the inky black night looking down on a reticulate network of charged fractals crisscrossing across my entire field of view.
@@zakaria4202 don't worry tho, since airplanes are designed to handle lighting strikes, lightings won't have any effect on the plane, plus the plane is flying above the clouds which the lightings most likely can't strike, that's why pilots tend to go up above the clouds rather than lowering down the plane when there's a storm
@@Odysseus_Petrichor you're right about not being in danger above the clouds. But don't think lightning can't do damage planes because "it's designed to handle". That shows lack of understanding on the linearizations and approximations we do, and underestimating nature
Now, the super rare ground to cloud strikes are captured on video. I find those even more fascinating. Planetary scale voltage adjustment taking place.
@@1000-THR no. Lightning is just the visual element of current flow. Current flows from higher potential to the lower potential. Let's just assume that electrons carry the charge. The positive hole theory adopted by the US military is only confusing the issue here for time being. The current flows through space all the way from the Sun following the lines of flux. Birkland current is it's name. The entire universe is run like this. The best way to spot the upward current path is by observing the branching of the lightning leaders. The main charge comes from one source and dissipate over distance.
@@JonatasAdoM theres a photo of it coming from the ground.. its like the strike is magnetically pulling it from the earth. and the tallest/easiest one pulled from the earth meets the one from the sky for the exchange
@@JonatasAdoM the lightning from the sky searches the path of least resistance. Once it comes close to the ground, positive charges are pulled by the extreme potential towards the lightning branches, creating a small lightning like branch coming from the gorund. The first two that connect, create a circuit and the whole charge discharges through that line in almost an instant.
Lighting, though pretty common, always amazes me. The step leaders phenomenon is just astonishing. Seeing charges grow out of the tops of trees and telephone poles, as if saying, “here, over here! Choose me!”
@@Xolozthe scientific method didn't exist until the 1500s. also that is the most elementary, stupidest explanation of lightning I've ever heard. you should delete your comment it's pretty embarrassing tbh
Seeing the stepped leader climb down out of the cloud was almost therapeutic to watch. Such a beautiful scene! The music to accompany it was fantastic too! Even the sound of the thunder in slow motion was surprisingly nice to listen to.
I KNOW. Gosh, the things he would discover if he could work with the current technology and resources of the 21st century. His research far exceeded that of his time, I would have loved to have a conversation with him. It would be quite fascinating.
Krisztián Szirtes I tried wathing that series, but I imetiatly stopped watching when I saw a katana that makes his wearer invisible by guiding the photons around him through it´s sharp blade. When I saw that i thought: "Nope, i am outta here"
@@krisztianszirtes5414 He was one of a kind. After he died the american government took over his entire work and went trough all his stuff. Just to make sure that everything he was working on could not be a _threat_ when in hands if _enemies._ A guy who went through his stuff; Trumps relative. Now, _if_ they found something - would the government really tell that...? You know, Teslas mind must have been beyond genius, when a government feard that some of his ideas could end up in other hands and built a threat. Tesla was talking about wirless energy in times when such things as smarthphones and wifi did not exist. His imagination from back then is today reality. Tesla was mentally already in 2019; if not even further.
Maybe I'm missing something here but to my knowledge, if you're the best choice for the lightning e.g. a golfer in a barren golf course, it will go for you. So why would standing under a tree be bad if it then goes for the tree and discharges into the ground?
@@Chiz1992 The lightning charge travels down the tree and boils the sap. The instant steam causes the tree-trunk to explode, sending large chunks of wood in all directions. Once the ionised path is established but the tree is removed, the 'shelterer' becomes the next conductive object that takes the charge. Alternatively, the tree sap boils away, the wood resistance rises, then the charge jumps out of the side of the tree and heads for the nearest grounded object - the sheltering golfer. In through the head, out through the feet, bang you're dead!
What I've seen working outdoors is lightning DOES NOT always strike the tallest object. It picks the best path, and many times multiple paths, to ground! Beautiful but lethal and scary at the same time!
"Lighting DOES NOT always strike the tallest object." I know that for a fact! Riverside CA rarely gets thunderstorms, and the ones they get are real miniscule. Once, when it was just overcast, a guy was walking along a low point when a bolt of lightning struck the ground, missing him by 10 feet! This, in spite of a bunch of palm trees in the area, plus a 200 foot hill! The poor guy went into shock!
Funfact: *If the lighting is going to strike you then you will get goosebumps and every hair on your will stand before it hits you.* This happened to me once while I was in a car.Thankfully it hit a few meters away from me
It's due to to the positive streamers discharging or rather attracting the negatively charged lightning towards itself. So, as the video showed positive streamers rising from the ground, if you are around it, your hair tends to have that static electricity which attracts itself towards the lightning.
I once heared the loudest bang ever then everything went white. I was temporarily blinded. Since sound travels slowly i would have noticed a delay even if it was just 100 yards away. How I didn't get struck, i have no idea. Was it a streamer that blinded me? Who knows. I didn't get goosebumps because i was riding my bicycle downhill at 55mph with just a shirt on
I have loved lightning since I was a child-----some of my most happy moments were a night walking in the rain looking at the lightning-----the thunder used to frighten me---now at 80- years----I enjoy the lightning as well
High speed cameras have been around for decades. Before videos system could perform fast enough, researchers used high speed film cameras to record events for later analysis in slow motion.
Funny thing is they wasted all that time and money with expensive slowmo cams when just setting a dim exposure and leaving the shutter open on the DSLR does the exact same thing. It's easy to interpret from a still image too based on structure and brightnesses so this experiment yields no additional useful info.
We should use the femto camera developed by ravi shankar it can captyre lightining's movement at the speed of light that is trillion frames per second🤔🤔
Wowee, this is beautiful, it's so interesting to see lightning being born! There's a single tendril reaching out for the lightning wriggling through the sky, looking for that tendril.. and when they finally meet it's beautiful!! :D
Water slows light by 75%, so we can assume that the gamma photons are trying to follow the path with least water. Of course the lightning goes faster than the water can fall so it only has to worry about where water is in its path as no water is going to fall into the lightning as it traces its way down and flashes.
Funny I remember experts were saying that lightning started from the ground upwards and this video just proved that it indeed does not do that. What a great video, I actually learned a lot, much more than school or anywhere else lol.
It’s just amazing that kind of power and charge exists within our atmosphere and all around us. The sky and clouds meet to form this larger than life electrical connection.
My father, the physicist, and I politely argued as to which direction lightning travelled from sky-to-ground or ground-to-sky. It was years later when we found we were both correct.
I saw this in real life a while back. I was standing on my front porch watching a storm and lightning happened to strike my neighbors fence right in the center of my field of vision. I saw a thin branch of lightning from the ground to the end of my field of vision, then the next instant it was as thick as a tree trunk and i almost jumped through my screen door.
I saw it as well. Laying in a backpacking tent during an intense Florida thunderstorm. I had pulled my pack into the tent and it was just getting dark. I could feel the static building up and saw tiny purple blue sparks rising up off the metal rings on my pack for a couple of seconds before the main bolt hit a pine tree about 50 feet away. One of those talk to god moments where your cursing yourself for being out there in that situation and happy to live through it.
And the thunder exalts [Allah] with praise of Him - and the angels [as well] from fear of Him - and He sends thunderbolts and strikes therewith whom He wills while they dispute about Allah ; and He is severe in assault.
The thought of a person trying to capture lightning in high speed... Have to thank you for that! And the knowledge gained from the footage... invaluable
Very interesting. I particularly like the picture of the fence post emitting a positive charge as the lightning comes down. Was the post metal or was there something metsl underground?
Even if we had the technology (not quite yet) it would be a cost prohibitive infrastructure & danger to air travel for all of the towers required, we still get more energy from the sun in an hour of daylight than we could use in a year. Lightning seems powerful (and it is, being hotter than the surface of the sun) but it just doesn't last long enough. Think a 60 watt light bulb plus 1 refrigerator powered just over a week from a typical single bolt.
Took the guy 2 years to film one lightning, how much time you think you will need to wait just to power your house for a day? And where will you store that burst of electricity without blowing everything up?
@Drip4Sale Earth has 510 million quilometers squared of surface area, even if it was 8 million lightnings an hour, it's still not enough to become a viable option for energy
after he said "pulses" i was like, "wait, this kinda sounds like aliens are coming down and sending very loud volts of energy to earth. to finish simulating"
Seeing video and stills of lightning always leaves me astonished and with a question; why does lightning look so much like plant roots as it arcs across the sky? The structure of it in some ways also resemble veins or arteries in bodies. Any thoughts or theory about this feature of lightning? Anyway, great video and thanks for educating us.
Well, it’s nice to see that some of the defense budget is going to things like this, instead of fighting endless wars in the Middle East… This is cheaper, advances our understanding of the universe, and doesn’t make everyone hate the U.S.
That's amazing! Looks alot like how slime molds grow. Both branch out looking for what they need, either food or a grounding point respectively, then take the path of least resistance once it's found.
GetRoasted1 Capture light on film? You mean light actually travelling? You do understand that to film something it relies on light being collected? You can't film it, only the things it interacts with.
Josh Russell you understand that the speed of light is finite right? So figure out how many miles light travels in one second. 186, 000 miles. Or 982, 080, 000 feet, or 11, 784, 960, 000 inches. Now divide the number of inches by the trillion frames. You could actually watch light travel at .25mm at a time per frame. Obviously you would only see the light do as it does once it has traveled whatever path it must to be reflected in your direction off of which ever object. The speed of light is fast, but very much a finite number.
GetRoasted1 if I remember well, this camera captured such high speed by sending a few pulses of light one after another, and then capturing in slow motion... Giving the impression of seeing a single pulse in very slow motion.
That must be the same NASA that refuses to admit the Apollo missions were ended early because there's really a highly advanced alien civilization living there. The speed of light is always said to travel at 186, 000 miles per second, which is the speed at which electromagnetic radiation travels at in a vacuum. Now, the speed at which light travels only changes when the medium that its traveling through changes, just like sound. Also, different wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation travel through those different mediums at different speeds. The myth here is the alleged coverup of the true speed of light that you put forth. I don't doubt that NASA refuses to talk about it, because any legitimate scientist or organization does not even dignify conspiracy theories.
Awesome. It's amazing how technology has progressed that they can view lightning in slow motion now, Mother Nature at her most beautiful and dangerous too.
Seeing it "search" like that while in the cloud is creepy. I always assumed lighting is a single bolt. Seeing it wiggile like that freaks me out a bit
@@ker0356 that would be cool
@@ker0356 its trying to strike you but its blind
@@ker0356 Quantum physics.
there is an easy experiment we can perform to see if lightning is intelligent. Here, you hold this kite string, and I'll take notes under this pointy metalic looking tree.
I always assumed it took the path of least resistance. But didn't really think about how it would find that path.
That explains why you get the buzzing feeling when there’s about to be a strike near you. If you are outside in a storm and feel that “static” feeling there’s about to be a hit near you.
how does it explain?
you ever rub a balloon through your hair, or at least seen someone with long hair have it done to them? if it happened to you did it have a peculiar feeling around your head and the balloon and/or if you did it to someone else noticed the hair reach for the balloon?
This is a static difference in charge, and that feeling is it being attracted to each other and reaching out, as you may imagine that is near literally nothing compared to lightning and the great imbalance of charge involved
Basically the same feeling of being attracted to the air around you and the tingling from electric charges reaching out (remember, at least a good portion of nerve commutation to brain is electrical in nature) happens near where lightning will strike as the negative charge of the clouds starts reaching for the grounds positive charge, and that positive charge may "decide" to choose you as part of the path
Or maybe a HIT is about to happen ON you. Really.
I can confirm the "static feeling", I almost got hit by lightning once, thankfully it hit a power pole instead.
Exactly. I had one hit a tree next to me. Im talking split seconds before it happened all my hair on my arms stood up and skin went all goose bumpy then crack and the swearing started shortly after hahaha
Imagine if the step leader was that slow in real life while the actual discharge was still at a blinding flash of speed. It would be beautiful
Imagine the sense of dread as one appears directly above you.
@@emma- holy shit! That’s a damn unnerving idea ! 🙇🏻♂️😅
@@emma- *run.*
@@phoebusapollo8365 casually running at 200mph
It'd be even more terrifying if the step leader started following you to your house.
You really can't enjoy watching a storm without the lightning, at sunset during a summer storm watching the lightning light up the inside of the clouds, better than any fireworks show
One of the main reasons I love Colorado. The storms out here are incredible, and every summer, the lightning that you described is absolutely worth grabbing a chair, a beer, and watching the show. Nothing puts into perspective the power of mother nature like a high-altitude lightning storm.
Yeah lighting is much more beautiful than the freaking fireworks..idk why but the firework making my ear hurt more than when lighting strike ..
Also, if you live in a High-Lightning strike zone, then watch as your neighbors' tree gets struck.
@@LymezoidBeats lol
@@hamusapphire2201 Like the neighborhood behind my house has been struck MULTIPLE times in the SAME storm, and in different storms.
A lightening strike at a distance is most beautiful when seen from the air. As I returned from a cross country flight done as part of private pilot training and my home rural airfield and its pattern were in sight I saw a strike from a cloud to the ground in the distance. It was clear enough that I could see the entire bolt and it was one of the most impressive phenomena I have had the pleasure of seeing while doing light plane flying.
incredible
Amazing 😮
It sounds like you're writing an essay
Outta ya damn mind 😂
Wowzerz
Lightning is the most amazing and scary thing there is. There is no other discharge with such power and voltage levels.
South Africa's Escom should find a way to capture lightning; electricity for everybody for ever.
There is and it is your mum's
@@450clancy6 Ew, post taco bell discharge
@@HeinRichKocHPretoria there is it’s called “energy” this is available to anyone it’s called frequency
Unfettered 'energy' ie lightning can rise to millions of volts because it's not restricted by anything just like a dead short in a 400kv substation to earth.
"The sky reaches for the earth. And the earth responds 'here I am'"
Sounds something what a God would say
@@woodonfire7406 Job 38:35 Canst thou send lightnings, that they may go and say unto thee, Here we are?
"and ayeeeeeye will always love yoooouuuui!"
Oh wow! I didn’t know that could happen!
I never heard it. I’m deaf and blind! Thanks for your contribution!
More like “PEEK-A-BOO”
The way the lightning "investigates" the path to the ground seems almost sentient.
It's like an a* pathfinding algorithm
It's the same way water "investigates" a path through land, forming a river.
It's the same way I find my phone in the dark
@@hrgwea ehh, its a bit different. Rivers all flow into one main stream, while lightning "veins" out from a central source. You'll very rarely see rivers splitting like that
@Tahu Nuva, the river is the result after the water already found the path of least resistance. You rarely see a lighting splitting in two, because that requires that two paths are found.
So, the two processes are identical, the only difference is the speed at which they occur.
The Fact that this was 11 Years ago Really shows how Advanced We’ve Become Since. Now things Like Recording Slo-Mo Lightning can be Done on a Phone!
If this was redone today it could be made even slower
Well mate, youl never know till you drop dead and gamble with your eternal soul now will you. Dh
@General Cham it’s been around thousands of years why would 11 years make it to away?
The fact that the original comment was made 34 years ago that I’m replying to really shows how advanced we’ve become since. Now things like this recording Slo-Mo Lightning can be done not on a phone but on a banana!
@@fault. monke
The "step leader" looks like an algorithm to find the ground
Isn't is a fractal?
Algorithms are the simulacra not the other way around
The dynamics of a lightning strike could never be explained that elegantly 🤣
@@MadScientist267 I don't think there is anything elegant about algorithms, just the opposite. Nature is elegant, the brain is elegant whereas an algorithm to recognize faces is brute force digital computation.
@@billdberger7407 Hate to say it but there's nothing elegant about a lightning strike. That's more pissed off electrons trying to get from one place to another, a really good distance apart at that, *NOW*
It may be efficient, beautiful, mesmerising, potent, spontaneous, bright, loud, violent... Probably a few others that aren't immediately coming to mind... But elegant isn't on my list.
It is however, far as I'm concerned, nature's most impressive "single" release of energy on this planet, I can absolutely give it that.
I remember watching this series as a kid and being fascinated by all the stuff our planet is capable of. Volcanoes, Hurricanes, Lightning, Tornadoes, Earthquakes, Tsunamis, Floods... those are the VHS tapes I had...
I'm still fascinated. Netflix has a bunch of great documentaries about this kind of stuff available now
th-cam.com/video/avFP67EIYvo/w-d-xo.html
You're so lucky 😭 I wanna see it but they don't even teach these in school. Nature is so amazing...
All of that but the climate should never change :-(
100th like
The feelers that come out of the ground, looking to connect with the bolt, are to me the most amazing thing. Because I doubt many of us not in this field of work, were aware that this is how lightning makes contact with objects on the ground or in the sky. It was awesome to see several of them still sticking out of the ground, even after the lightning from the cloud had already made a connection. They looked Almost like electrical garden eels!! Amazing!!
13 years
I never knew or heard of the positive streamers lightning makes from the ground.
St. Elmo's Fire.
It's just ions and moving electrons. Simple chemistry.
Yes they have low clouds with purple flashes and then it rains like hell lol
Imagine if it was slow in real life if you are gonna get hit by lightning you will see a +ive stream on you head lol
And that's when you know you are fkd
th-cam.com/video/jpGqPKSuGGA/w-d-xo.html go
Incredible. Looks just like blood viens, nervous system, plants roots, ect. As above, SO below.
Huh.
Damn.I never thought of it like that.Youre Right 👍
@04dram04 💯💯💯 true! I think it's maybe because everything is made by the same guy.. there seems to be patterns in everything..even space just my opinion not forcing this on anyone ✌️😘
@@jupiterr9892 it makes sense really
Yep that’s exactly what I was likening it to... it’s got to be all the same intelligence behind this extraordinary reality
I love how discovery channels have the sheer power to just turn almost anything into a horror film
This is just.....beautifully terrifying ♡
How's your relationship with your father
@@Maraien they don’t got one lmao
@@drbright10 Hello? This is the based department. We just wanted to tell you that we're impressed with your work.
@@Maraien dear god 😭💀
😭😭😭
I had a positive streamer come up through me once. The brilliant blue flowed out of my hand and into a truck I was next to. Every muscle in that arm contracted instantly and painfully. The main bolt arced over head and hit the ground. I told the ER physician how lucky I felt to have survived and for a split second was PLASMA MAN!
That must have been an amazing experience to see the charge blasting out of your arm. Lucky you escaped the other one coming from above.
did you gain super power from that? did your brain becomes a super computer?
The film was true, someone can hold a flow of electricity.
Did you get refreshed after that strike?
This has to be brain destroying. How could you mentally survive to such noise/light? Do you feel ok?
It's like the sky gropes down and says "ground, still there?". And ground says "yep!" And they hold hands. Awww.
What a cute frkn angry kitteh photo👍🐾
SHUT UP! GO AWAY!
Hahahaa this comment is genius!
Lol brilliant.
Cutest explanation of lightening xD
The best lightning show I ever saw was on a plane flying high above the clouds over the Pacific in the inky black night looking down on a reticulate network of charged fractals crisscrossing across my entire field of view.
All fun and games until that bad boy slithers to your plane!
@@zakaria4202 don't worry tho, since airplanes are designed to handle lighting strikes, lightings won't have any effect on the plane, plus the plane is flying above the clouds which the lightings most likely can't strike, that's why pilots tend to go up above the clouds rather than lowering down the plane when there's a storm
@@Odysseus_Petrichor you're right about not being in danger above the clouds.
But don't think lightning can't do damage planes because "it's designed to handle". That shows lack of understanding on the linearizations and approximations we do, and underestimating nature
Now, the super rare ground to cloud strikes are captured on video. I find those even more fascinating. Planetary scale voltage adjustment taking place.
@@1000-THR no.
Lightning is just the visual element of current flow. Current flows from higher potential to the lower potential. Let's just assume that electrons carry the charge. The positive hole theory adopted by the US military is only confusing the issue here for time being. The current flows through space all the way from the Sun following the lines of flux. Birkland current is it's name. The entire universe is run like this. The best way to spot the upward current path is by observing the branching of the lightning leaders. The main charge comes from one source and dissipate over distance.
@@1000-THR Why do people think lightning comes from the ground?
I'll never understand it and this is not the first time I have heard it.
@@1000-THR bruh did you even watch the video? it literally shows lightning going from the cloud to the ground
@@JonatasAdoM theres a photo of it coming from the ground.. its like the strike is magnetically pulling it from the earth. and the tallest/easiest one pulled from the earth meets the one from the sky for the exchange
@@JonatasAdoM the lightning from the sky searches the path of least resistance. Once it comes close to the ground, positive charges are pulled by the extreme potential towards the lightning branches, creating a small lightning like branch coming from the gorund. The first two that connect, create a circuit and the whole charge discharges through that line in almost an instant.
2:33 You didn't wipe the third camera. Don't you love it?
Q
harry camper. tent camper? rv? state parks? wilderness? bigfoot stories LOL?
No need to wipe 3rd camera, it’s so far back dust dirt and grime doesn’t really hit it.
Poor Lil third camera
Legend has it, he's still looking for the mop to wipe the third camera down.
Lighting, though pretty common, always amazes me. The step leaders phenomenon is just astonishing. Seeing charges grow out of the tops of trees and telephone poles, as if saying, “here, over here! Choose me!”
I remember seeing this on cable. It made me love lightning even terrifying as it can be.
2:44 begins the money shots.
Thank you friend. I will subscribe to you for that excellent tip. Subscribed.
@@michaelking4578 th-cam.com/video/qQKhIK4pvYo/w-d-xo.html
Good shit boss lol
Yeah let's skip the interesting part because we don't have 2:43 to spare to learn something. Congratulations on your 97 likes as of now.
needs more upvotes
It's 11 years later and I still find these recordings fascinating..!
And I watched it at .25x speed to get extra super slow motion🙃
Same XD
The Indian brain lol I don't know why even I got same idea to experience the doctor strange movie feeling you can see he is talking to that soul
@@mikee5208 ikr, these people are so annoying
r/madlad
It doesn't make it slower you only get to see the frames slower but the technical speed doesn't change.
God it's so beautiful. I can totally see how our ancestors thought it was the Gods I mean how else can you explain such beauty and endless power
Clouds things going so fast that they can make electricity and then turning it into lightning i think it’s called science
This video literally explains it
@@Xolozthe scientific method didn't exist until the 1500s.
also that is the most elementary, stupidest explanation of lightning I've ever heard. you should delete your comment it's pretty embarrassing tbh
@@Ken-ru6or yo ken it’s supposed to sound stupid don’t you think everybody knows how lightning is conducted my guy it’s called sarcasm
@@rajeevm1989 rhetoric question
0:06 now I know from where dragon Ball Z got those mega kick sounds.
Seeing the stepped leader climb down out of the cloud was almost therapeutic to watch. Such a beautiful scene! The music to accompany it was fantastic too! Even the sound of the thunder in slow motion was surprisingly nice to listen to.
I wish I could view life like a book like this!
talking about frequency, Tesla had that suspicion 100 years ago. Glad we figured it out now.
I KNOW. Gosh, the things he would discover if he could work with the current technology and resources of the 21st century. His research far exceeded that of his time, I would have loved to have a conversation with him. It would be quite fascinating.
*****
If you watch the series Warehouse 13, you can understand why it is about Tesla a lot of times, he was a genius :)
Krisztián Szirtes
I tried wathing that series, but I imetiatly stopped watching when I saw a katana that makes his wearer invisible by guiding the photons around him through it´s sharp blade.
When I saw that i thought: "Nope, i am outta here"
just shows that science is not the search of truth as they would have us believe.
@@krisztianszirtes5414 He was one of a kind.
After he died the american government took over his entire work and went trough all his stuff. Just to make sure that everything he was working on could not be a _threat_ when in hands if _enemies._ A guy who went through his stuff; Trumps relative.
Now, _if_ they found something - would the government really tell that...?
You know, Teslas mind must have been beyond genius, when a government feard that some of his ideas could end up in other hands and built a threat.
Tesla was talking about wirless energy in times when such things as smarthphones and wifi did not exist. His imagination from back then is today reality. Tesla was mentally already in 2019; if not even further.
It's amazing, how branched out lightning really is, though we usually only notice the single bolt.
And that, friends, is why you don't stand under a tree in lightning.
Maybe I'm missing something here but to my knowledge, if you're the best choice for the lightning e.g. a golfer in a barren golf course, it will go for you.
So why would standing under a tree be bad if it then goes for the tree and discharges into the ground?
@@Chiz1992 The lightning charge travels down the tree and boils the sap. The instant steam causes the tree-trunk to explode, sending large chunks of wood in all directions. Once the ionised path is established but the tree is removed, the 'shelterer' becomes the next conductive object that takes the charge. Alternatively, the tree sap boils away, the wood resistance rises, then the charge jumps out of the side of the tree and heads for the nearest grounded object - the sheltering golfer. In through the head, out through the feet, bang you're dead!
*In case it gets **_Struck_** & the Branches fall on you ?*
WOAH HOLY CRAP DUDE OMG I DIDNT KNWOW WJ OFDNdniaw
@phuc ewe *Not Hurt - Killed !*
What I've seen working outdoors is lightning DOES NOT always strike the tallest object. It picks the best path, and many times multiple paths, to ground! Beautiful but lethal and scary at the same time!
"Lighting DOES NOT always strike the tallest object." I know that for a fact! Riverside CA rarely gets thunderstorms, and the ones they get are real miniscule. Once, when it was just overcast, a guy was walking along a low point when a bolt of lightning struck the ground, missing him by 10 feet! This, in spite of a bunch of palm trees in the area, plus a 200 foot hill! The poor guy went into shock!
Funfact: *If the lighting is going to strike you then you will get goosebumps and every hair on your will stand before it hits you.*
This happened to me once while I was in a car.Thankfully it hit a few meters away from me
It's due to to the positive streamers discharging or rather attracting the negatively charged lightning towards itself. So, as the video showed positive streamers rising from the ground, if you are around it, your hair tends to have that static electricity which attracts itself towards the lightning.
It was the loudest thing you've ever heard right? BANG! (I have been close to a lightening strike myself).
I once heared the loudest bang ever then everything went white. I was temporarily blinded. Since sound travels slowly i would have noticed a delay even if it was just 100 yards away. How I didn't get struck, i have no idea. Was it a streamer that blinded me? Who knows. I didn't get goosebumps because i was riding my bicycle downhill at 55mph with just a shirt on
Hood: "Chief, mind telling me why you're on TV?"
Chief: "Sir, watching lightning in slow motion."
Holy hell it does sound like him🤣
When you film at night with a GoPro and lightning strikes, the still photo just looks like you took a photo during the day.
That was just BEAUTIFUL!! Better than fireworks imo
I have loved lightning since I was a child-----some of my most happy moments were a night walking in the rain looking at the lightning-----the thunder used to frighten me---now at 80- years----I enjoy the lightning as well
It is fascinating but frightening too.
That is so cool! I loved it and was fascinated by it since I was a kid, now I'm 20 lol
Kenneth Griffith why the -strikethrough-
Paneesh, Who? :3 same. cept im 21. and never really got the chance to see much lightning growing up in the LA area
Muzikrazy213 Oh!
Happy New Year!!! Almost 11 years old and the is vid still amazes and educates!
Everyone gangsta until a skyscraper-tall-big-ass muscular man pops up after the lightning strikes the ground
That dude had slow-mo camera 9 years back..
*The Slow mo guys* left the chat
All l knows is lightning is wild and crazy it will kill you and leave you dry...
I had lightning struck 50 feet or a bit more away from me... the sound alone scared the beejeepers out of little 10 year old me!.... LOL
th-cam.com/video/avFP67EIYvo/w-d-xo.html
High speed cameras have been around for decades. Before videos system could perform fast enough, researchers used high speed film cameras to record events for later analysis in slow motion.
He had a government research budget to pay for them too.
This is bloody amazing, the slow motion video of the step leader finding a charged area, and watching the pulses was amazing
Wow from this to playing the Batman. Very impressive!
Super slow and the lightning is still quick
Funny thing is they wasted all that time and money with expensive slowmo cams when just setting a dim exposure and leaving the shutter open on the DSLR does the exact same thing. It's easy to interpret from a still image too based on structure and brightnesses so this experiment yields no additional useful info.
@@kishascape listen man, the dude is spending his evenings taking pictures of lightning, give him a break. Let him have this 😂
@@salsamancer lol
@@kishascape no encuentro fallas en tu lógica lmao
it looks better on video though 🧐
TH-cam recommendations brought me here. After 9 years.
I don't fuckin care bitch
hi.
Same!
We should use the femto camera developed by ravi shankar it can captyre lightining's movement at the speed of light that is trillion frames per second🤔🤔
Humans breathe air.
Wowee, this is beautiful, it's so interesting to see lightning being born! There's a single tendril reaching out for the lightning wriggling through the sky, looking for that tendril.. and when they finally meet it's beautiful!! :D
2:47 OHH it's like a race...who ever gets to the ground first.....WINS
It's the wave function and the collapse of the wave function, submicroscopic QM concepts occurring at macro scale.
Unless your standing at the spot it connects too. "Tag, your out! "
The path of least resistance applied here as well ?
Water slows light by 75%, so we can assume that the gamma photons are trying to follow the path with least water.
Of course the lightning goes faster than the water can fall so it only has to worry about where water is in its path as no water is going to fall into the lightning as it traces its way down and flashes.
@@ZeroOskul No wonder why the Desert Southwest lightning displays are so Incredible!
Funny I remember experts were saying that lightning started from the ground upwards and this video just proved that it indeed does not do that. What a great video, I actually learned a lot, much more than school or anywhere else lol.
I remember hearing about that. Also reminded of a movie..
I think “they” meant there is some form of electrical energy that can emerge from the GROUND
Just not exactly the same as thunder
I mean it *can*, but it isn't nearly as common as cloud-to-ground lightning
I hope the algorithm never stops recommending this to me
It’s just amazing that kind of power and charge exists within our atmosphere and all around us. The sky and clouds meet to form this larger than life electrical connection.
2:44 that is just about the coolest thing ever ._.
My father, the physicist, and I politely argued as to which direction lightning travelled from sky-to-ground or ground-to-sky. It was years later when we found we were both correct.
This lightning proves how much farther cameras need to be improved at capturing more frames per second. Good find.
Whenever I hear this particular narrator's voice, I know I am about to learn something interesting.
Right? Pitty that I can't remember his name 😥.
His voice is one of my best sleeping pills.
Absolutely fascinating, like to see what they can do with the cameras now. ✌🏽✨
Survivors of lightning strikes are walking miracles. After seeing this, I'm convinced that it is nothing short of a miracle.
He wasn't hit by lightning, but look up this dude Frane Selak.
Luckiest and unlickiest guy ever!
Crazy stuff!
Beautiful phenomenon captured by the eye of the beholder...
it's kind of crazy just *how far* digital tech (including cameras) has come in just the last 20 years or so
the good stuff starts from 2:45
Thanks!
I saw this in real life a while back. I was standing on my front porch watching a storm and lightning happened to strike my neighbors fence right in the center of my field of vision. I saw a thin branch of lightning from the ground to the end of my field of vision, then the next instant it was as thick as a tree trunk and i almost jumped through my screen door.
I bet you got tone deaf for the next few hours, after that.
strikeout1991 Actually it didn't really hurt my ears, but I could see the photo negative of the bolt every time I closed my eyes for a long time.
MrHeems
Oh damn, that must've been fucked up.
That must have been crazy dude i would have run into my house screaming lol
I saw it as well. Laying in a backpacking tent during an intense Florida thunderstorm. I had pulled my pack into the tent and it was just getting dark. I could feel the static building up and saw tiny purple blue sparks rising up off the metal rings on my pack for a couple of seconds before the main bolt hit a pine tree about 50 feet away. One of those talk to god moments where your cursing yourself for being out there in that situation and happy to live through it.
Anyone else in awe of this work of nature? It literally looks like tree roots. Nature is in tune with itself. That’s how I wanna be.
@@alicebowie9474 What are these but clear signs of God? Yet there are people who will look the other way
Nikon be like : “Yeah, that's our cam”
Those positive streamers are interesting
not electron? negative?
@@thailander5572 watch the video to understand positive and negative charges.
I Was Struck By Lightning. Thanks.
2:46 is... amazing.
Seeing lightning like that makes me think that this is just God playing Snake looking for apples.
Hahahahaha
And the thunder exalts [Allah] with praise of Him - and the angels [as well] from fear of Him - and He sends thunderbolts and strikes therewith whom He wills while they dispute about Allah ; and He is severe in assault.
Your statement sounds atheist
@@afiquacks1246 ok and?
@@afiquacks1246 they're just making a harmless joke. your comment does not give your religion a good name, being so judgemental like that.
It intrigues me how something that sounds so petrifying and is so destructive in nature can appear to be so ethereal. A very beautiful phenomenon.
Use me as the “If only this were in a higher resolution” button
Not gonna lie, that “rare photograph” looks a lot like an anime battle
The thought of a person trying to capture lightning in high speed... Have to thank you for that! And the knowledge gained from the footage... invaluable
1:47 is that lightning dancing!?
Thank you so friggen much I dont often smile, but I was smiling ear to ear watching. 🤗✌🏻✌🏻🇺🇸
Ok
'Murika
I could have watched an hour of this. Amazing, thanks!
Very interesting. I particularly like the picture of the fence post emitting a positive charge as the lightning comes down. Was the post metal or was there something metsl underground?
This is really very interesting. It is very useful for understanding the phenomenon of lightning.
I love this Early 2000s looking quality 👍 Reminds me of 90s Disney Channel programs!
Imagine being able to harness that energy!
that would be satisfy moment..
Even if we had the technology (not quite yet) it would be a cost prohibitive infrastructure & danger to air travel for all of the towers required, we still get more energy from the sun in an hour of daylight than we could use in a year. Lightning seems powerful (and it is, being hotter than the surface of the sun) but it just doesn't last long enough. Think a 60 watt light bulb plus 1 refrigerator powered just over a week from a typical single bolt.
1.21 gigawatts?!?!?!?!
Took the guy 2 years to film one lightning, how much time you think you will need to wait just to power your house for a day? And where will you store that burst of electricity without blowing everything up?
@Drip4Sale Earth has 510 million quilometers squared of surface area, even if it was 8 million lightnings an hour, it's still not enough to become a viable option for energy
Grateful to all the scientists who are doing research on this lightning phenomenon to unravel the mysteries surrounding it.
Woh! thank you TH-cam algorithm for recommending me this legendary video.
after he said "pulses" i was like, "wait, this kinda sounds like aliens are coming down and sending very loud volts of energy to earth. to finish simulating"
Totaly man
Seeing video and stills of lightning always leaves me astonished and with a question; why does lightning look so much like plant roots as it arcs across the sky?
The structure of it in some ways also resemble veins or arteries in bodies. Any thoughts or theory about this feature of lightning?
Anyway, great video and thanks for educating us.
its basically like roots trying to find a water source, in this case, lightning is trying to find a ground
Had the pleasure of watching a lightning storm while listening to metal,greatest experience so far!
Same asf bro lol
this video got really good at the end
Wow lightning is pretty weird if you think about it, fucking millions of volts seemingly coming out of nowhere
It does come from somewhere. Unless you haven't passed the 6th grade then you should know.
moises1moy I obviously said "SEEMINGLY coming out of nowhere". Don't pull conclusions out of thin air my friend, it's not really nice
atiseru Shot fired
atiseru conclusions seemingly pulled out of nowhere xD
Bono Music You need a medal
Thank goodness these advancements in technology make it possible to see this breathtaking 480p
"anatomy of lightning" sounds like a prog-metal band with AT LEAST one Chapman stick player
Hah! 😁
Never question TH-cam recommendations, they know what's best for you
I COMMAND THE LIGHTNING'S HAND
Absolutely amazing photography and scientific exploration.
Slow motion: 1:13 You're welcome.
***** 2:41 even more welcome!
Well, it’s nice to see that some of the defense budget is going to things like this, instead of fighting endless wars in the Middle East… This is cheaper, advances our understanding of the universe, and doesn’t make everyone hate the U.S.
I love looking at comments on scientific videos.
0:36 wtf someone whispers "darkness"
O__o
"Ooh! Darn it!"
WE HAVE TECHNOLOGY
-patrick
That's amazing! Looks alot like how slime molds grow. Both branch out looking for what they need, either food or a grounding point respectively, then take the path of least resistance once it's found.
02:18 Tree: I don't feel so good.
2:33 not cleaning lenses properly...
Positive streamer: oh, no step leader, Im stuck
Step leader: *zzzzzzzzzzzzaps that ass*
Could have been better at 25000 fps
and if people say it isn't possible, then check out the slow mo guys
How about the one trillion frames per second camera? Im not sure if its actually real but look it up. You can capture light in slow motion.
GetRoasted1 Capture light on film? You mean light actually travelling? You do understand that to film something it relies on light being collected? You can't film it, only the things it interacts with.
Josh Russell you understand that the speed of light is finite right? So figure out how many miles light travels in one second. 186, 000 miles. Or 982, 080, 000 feet, or 11, 784, 960, 000 inches. Now divide the number of inches by the trillion frames. You could actually watch light travel at .25mm at a time per frame. Obviously you would only see the light do as it does once it has traveled whatever path it must to be reflected in your direction off of which ever object. The speed of light is fast, but very much a finite number.
GetRoasted1 if I remember well, this camera captured such high speed by sending a few pulses of light one after another, and then capturing in slow motion... Giving the impression of seeing a single pulse in very slow motion.
That must be the same NASA that refuses to admit the Apollo missions were ended early because there's really a highly advanced alien civilization living there.
The speed of light is always said to travel at 186, 000 miles per second, which is the speed at which electromagnetic radiation travels at in a vacuum. Now, the speed at which light travels only changes when the medium that its traveling through changes, just like sound. Also, different wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation travel through those different mediums at different speeds.
The myth here is the alleged coverup of the true speed of light that you put forth. I don't doubt that NASA refuses to talk about it, because any legitimate scientist or organization does not even dignify conspiracy theories.
*Here to see a compilation*
*Found a documentary film*
_This is what happens in the episodes of yt recommendations_
Awesome. It's amazing how technology has progressed that they can view lightning in slow motion now, Mother Nature at her most beautiful and dangerous too.
*2019 comments have entered the chat*
Commenters from that year suck. 😜
2020 now 😎
@@chrisalcala1007 yeeet 🙃