Zap! Scientists use Lasers to Cause Lightning Storms

by Rob Walker | April 14, 2008 at 01:06 pm
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_DSC0035LFWlowCache Valley Utah - Laser Fun USU. By Andrew Royce Johnson

_DSC0035LFWlowCache Valley Utah - Laser Fun USU. By Andrew Royce Johnson

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This is the coolest thing I've heard in a while, scientists have used lasers to trigger electrical activity in clouds.

I can just imagine a team of scientists in white gowns firing a big cannon into a cloud.

Zap!

A team of European scientists has deliberately triggered electrical activity in thunderclouds for the first time, according to a new paper in the latest issue of Optics Express, the Optical Society’s (OSA) open-access journal. They did this by aiming high-power pulses of laser light into a thunderstorm.

At the top of South Baldy Peak in New Mexico during two passing thunderstorms, the researchers used laser pulses to create plasma filaments that could conduct electricity akin to Benjamin Franklin's silk kite string. No air-to-ground lightning was triggered because the filaments were too short-lived, but the laser pulses generated discharges in the thunderclouds themselves.

"This was an important first step toward triggering lightning strikes with laser beams," says Jérôme Kasparian of the University of Lyon in France. "It was the first time we generated lighting precursors in a thundercloud." The next step of generating full-blown lightning strikes may come, he adds, after the team reprograms their lasers to use more sophisticated pulse sequences that will make longer-lived filaments to further conduct the lightning during storms.

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Amy Judd
Amy Judd
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:20 on April 14th, 2008

Rob Walker, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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