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Re: Holy Crap!
Original poster: Ed Phillips <evp@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi Russ,
While it could have been ball lightning, it was more likely that what
you saw was an electrical arc that the lightning stroke initiated
between one of the phases and a nearby ground wire (such as the one
at the top of poles for protecting the power lines underneath). Once
initiated, a phase to ground arc can persist for quite some time
before stopping either by being self extinguished, or by eventually
tripping an upstream ground fault detection relay (a 3-phase version
of a home GFI or arc fault detector... but on steroids).
Bert"
I used to see something similar that when I lived in Washington,
DC many years ago (1945-7). I lived in Anacostia, across the river
from town and the streetcar line on Pennsylvania SE was a couple of
miles away. The streetcars at that time used "plough" running in a
tunnel underground and midway between the two rails. When it snowed
and the snow froze in the opening to that tunnel (I don't think
Washington clears away snow even to this day, apparently in the
belief it will never snow again in spite of lots of experience to the
contrary and "why not give the government workers another day off")
the ploughs would sometimes break off causing an arc to start between
the two conductors in the tunnel. When this happened the arc could
travel for miles, sometimes even reflecting at the SE terminal of the
tracks. The result was a brilliant blue-green glow in the clouds
which travelled along the horzon! Although I saw the "lights in the
sky" several times I never saw the thing up close but the description
above came from a engineer friend of mine who saw it more than once
as he waited for the car.
Apparently from that view the thing was really spectacular.
Phenomenon was sort of a cross between a horizontal Jacob's
ladder and a rail gun.
Ed