What are those red filaments in the sky? They are a rarely seen form of lightning confirmed only about 35 years ago: red sprites. Research has shown that following a powerful positive cloud-to-ground lightning strike, red sprites may start as 100-meter balls of ionized air that shoot down from about 80-km high at 10 percent the speed of light. They are quickly followed by a group of upward streaking ionized balls. The featured image was taken late last month from the Jeseniky Mountains in northern Moravia in the Czech Republic. The distance to the red sprites is about 200 kilometers. Red sprites take only a fraction of a second to occur and are best seen when powerful thunderstorms are visible from the side. APOD in world languages: Arabic, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Beijing), Chinese (Taiwan), Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Farsi, French, French (Canada), German, Hebrew, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Montenegrin, Polish, Russian, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Taiwanese, Turkish, and Ukrainian
HD image: LINK ๐ธ
Copyright: Daniel ล ฤerba ๐ญ
Project Website: LINK ๐
It is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves.
Name | Craft |
---|---|
Oleg Artemyev | ISS |
Denis Matveev | ISS |
Sergey Korsakov | ISS |
Kjell Lindgren | ISS |
Bob Hines | ISS |
Samantha Cristoforetti | ISS |
Jessica Watkins | ISS |
Cai Xuzhe | Tiangong |
Chen Dong | Tiangong |
Liu Yang | Tiangong |
Copying/Pasting content (full or partial texts, video links, art, etc.) with adding very little original content is frowned upon by the community. Publishing such content could be considered exploitation of the "Hive Reward Pool" and may result in the account being Blacklisted.
Please refrain from copying and pasting, or decline the rewards on those posts going forward.
If you believe this comment is in error, please contact us in #appeals in Discord.