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§0§l How Wide is§0
§0§l Lightning?§0
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§0§l R. Saunders§0
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§3§lThe Science Series§0
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§0 The Commonwealth§0
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Page 3 of 9 Lightning usually brings the negative charge from a thunderstorm down to the ground. A negatively charged leader precedes the visible lightning, moving downwards below the clouds and through air containing pockets of positive
Page 4 of 9 charge. These are caused by point discharge ions released from the ground by the thunderstorm's high electric field.§0
§0 The leader branches in its attempt to find the path of least resistance. When one of these branches
Page 5 of 9 gets close to the ground, the negative charges attract positive ions from pointed objects, such as grass and trees, to form a conducting path between cloud and ground. The negative charges then drain to the ground starting from the bottom of the
Page 6 of 9 leader channel. This is the vicible 'return stroke' whose luminosity travels upwards as the charges move down. Those branches become brighter when their charges drain into the main channel. Photographs of lightning often overestimate the
Page 7 of 9 channel width because the film can be overexposed. Damaged objects that have been struck by lightning show channel diameters of between 2 and 100 millimeters.§0
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§0 -R. Saunders§0
§0Atmospheric Physics Group, Manchester University
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§0 A Letter from§0
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§0§l The Real World§0
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§0 Originally published§0
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§0 Why Don't Penguins'§0
§0 Feet Freeze?§0
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§0§l Transcribed§0
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§4§l Maester Lodish§0
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§0 3rd of July§0
§0 2018§0
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