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Reffing Rev. Wed Jul 15, 2009 08:23am

Last night I sat on the deck of the house we are staying in on vacation and watched the most amazing display of lightning I've seen in a long time. The sky everywhere else was starfilled. I checked the radar: the storm was 75 miles away and moving away.

I can see a great game on a Friday night getting suspended in the 4th quarter because of this and making people really mad, but in the spirit of safety...

Oh yeah the lightning was visible from 9:30 until after midnight.

Ref Ump Welsch Wed Jul 15, 2009 08:41am

Quote:

Originally Posted by TussAgee11 (Post 614450)
Just a quickie -

Do you have to have a cloud in order to have a lightening strike? In other words, if it is blue skies above, for miles all around, and one black cloud off in the distance, is it true that the lightening can only come from that cloud?

If you knew your weather facts, lightning does not come from the sky, it comes from the ground. The charges are at both ends, sky and ground, but it originates in the ground.

ppaltice Wed Jul 15, 2009 09:36am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ref Ump Welsch (Post 614718)
If you knew your weather facts, lightning does not come from the sky, it comes from the ground. The charges are at both ends, sky and ground, but it originates in the ground.

This is a little misleading I think.

Storm clouds in general become charged with a high concentration of negative charge at the bottom of the cloud. The ground builds up positive charge underneath the cloud (since opposite charges attract). As a result, there is an electric field between the ground and earth that can be quite substantial.

The air between the cloud and earth is initially non-conductive. Large electric fields can ionize the air creating positively charged ions and free electrons that make the air conductive.

Before lightning strikes, the air beneath the clouds starts to ionize forming what is called a step leader that attempts to find the path of least resistance towards the ground. As a result of this negative charged step leader, the ground becomes more positively charged underneath this step leader. The area is about the size of a football field and it is not evenly charged due to the surface being nonhomogeneous and the ground being resistive. The positive charge begins to rise from the ground forming streamers from areas of the ground with higher elevation (trees, buildings, people (on a football field with no trees or buildings), bleachers, etc.). Once contact is made between the leader and the streamers, you have lighting (caused by a large current ionizing the air around it) and thunder (caused by the air heating up and exploding).

The current (flows positive to negative) flows from the ground to the cloud. But it is the negative cloud that causes this large charge buildup in the ground.

mikesears Wed Jul 15, 2009 09:50am

Who knew we could learn science on an officiating forum?

@ppaltice

Can I just say, "Huh??" -- Just teasing you a little.


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