• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Watch A Storm Of Red Sprites Light Up The Himalayas

March 19, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Lightning is just one of the many spectacular luminous events that occur in Earth’s atmosphere. A particularly sought-after and mysterious one is red sprites, flashes of red-orange light that happen at altitudes of 50 to 90 kilometers (31 to 56 miles). They are very difficult to capture as despite being huge – up to 40 kilometers (25 miles) across – they only flash for a millisecond or so, so it truly blows our mind that two astrophotographers have captured over 100 in a row dancing in the sky over the Himalayas.

ADVERTISEMENT

Red sprites are electrical phenomena happening in the mesosphere. The color is caused by electric charges interacting with nitrogen, and the interaction creates the plumes and tendrils that we can see. Beautiful images of them can’t prepare you for the excitement of seeing them in action. This incredible video taken by astrophotographers Angel An and Shuchang Dong is stunning but it is also extremely valuable in helping us understand how these events come to be.

 The duo captured a lot more than just sprites. From the observation site near Pumoyongcuo Lake in the southern Tibetan Plateau, the astrophotographers snapped dancing sprites, secondary jets, and the first-ever recorded case in Asia of a green airglow known as ghost sprites.



“This event was truly remarkable,” co-author of the new study on these “cosmic fireworks”, Professor Gaopeng Lu from the University of Science and Technology of China, said in a statement. “By analyzing the parent lightning discharges, we discovered that the sprites were triggered by high-peak current positive cloud-to-ground lightning strikes within a massive mesoscale convective system. This suggests that thunderstorms in the Himalayan region have the potential to produce some of the most complex and intense upper-atmospheric electrical discharges on Earth.”

The team of scientists had a challenge though. The video is great but lacks precise enough timestamps to study the sprites and related phenomena in the wider atmospheric context. So they had to find a way to better estimate the timings.

They did so by matching the video times to the location of the star field and then synchronizing it to satellite trajectories to get the exact occurrence times. As timekeeping goes it’s certainly an unorthodox approach but it provided what was needed to understand where the sprites came from. Lighting discharges from precipitations associated with a convective complex are to blame. The complex extends from the Ganges Plains in India all the way to the Tibetan Plateau.

ADVERTISEMENT

The event has the highest recorded number of sprites ever seen in South Asia, and it shows that the area can compete with the American plains and the offshore European storms in terms of transient luminous events.

The study is published in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Evolito’s electric motors look set to take off in aerospace where YASA left off in automotive
  2. Chip shortage leads carmaker Opel to shut German plant until 2022
  3. Westminster Abbey Contains Britain’s Oldest Door, Once Rumored To Be Covered In Human Skin
  4. Can We Learn To Be Happier? Find Out More In Issue 14 Of CURIOUS – Out Now

Source Link: Watch A Storm Of Red Sprites Light Up The Himalayas

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Have You Seen This Snake? Florida Wants Your Help Finding Rare Species Seen Once In 50 Years
  • Plague Confirmed In Lake Tahoe Area For First Time In 5 Years, California Officials Say
  • Supergiant Star Spotted Blowing Milky Way’s Largest Bubble Of Its Kind, Surprising Astronomers
  • Game Theory Promised To Explain Human Decisions. Did It?
  • Genes, Hormones, And Hairstyling – Here Are Some Causes Of Hair Loss You Might Not Have Heard Of
  • Answer To 30-Year-Old Mystery Code Embedded In The Kryptos CIA Sculpture To Be Sold At Auction
  • Merry Mice: Human Brain Cells Transplanted Into Mice Reduce Anxiety And Depression
  • Asteroid-Bound NASA Mission Snaps Earth-Moon Portrait From 290 Million Kilometers Away
  • Forget State Mammals – Some States Have Official Dinosaurs, And They’re Awesome
  • Female Jumping Spiders Of Two Species Prefer The Sexy Red Males Of One, Leading To Hybridization
  • Why Is It So Difficult To Find New Moons In The Solar System?
  • New “Oxygen-Breathing” Crystal Could Recharge Fuel Cells And More
  • Some Gut Bacteria Cause Insomnia While Others Protect Against It, 400,000-Person Study Argues
  • Neanderthals And Homo Sapiens Got It On 100,000 Years Earlier Than We Thought
  • “Womb Of The Universe”: Native American Tribal Elders Help Archaeologists Decipher Ancient Rock Art In Missouri Cave
  • 16,000-Year-Old Paintings Suggest Prehistoric Humans Risked Their Lives To Enter “Shaman Training Cave”
  • Final Gasps Of A Dying Star Seen Through A Record-Breaking 130 Years Of Data
  • COVID-19 “Vaccine Alternative” Injection Could Be On Fast-Track To Approval From FDA
  • New Jersey Officials Investigate Possible First Locally Acquired Malaria Case Since 1991
  • First-of-Its-Kind Bright Orange Nurse Shark Recorded Off Costa Rica Makes History
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version