"I am not one who was born in the custody of wisdom. I am one who is fond of olden times and intense in quest of the sacred knowing of the ancients." Gustave Courbet

15 July 2012

Sprite.


Orbiting above a storm recently, International Space Station astronauts captured a rarely seen type of sky show on camera: a fleeting electrical burst called a red sprite.

And not just any sprite.

The red sprite's exceptional size (in a word, giant), plus the resolution and sense of scale in the picture—distributed by NASA this week—have experts intrigued, despite the fact that red sprites have been seen from space before.

Red sprites are electrical bursts that occur above highly active thunderstorms. They're rarely observed from the ground or space, due to their high altitudes (about 50 miles/80 kilometers above Earth), milliseconds-long durations, and relative dimness, compared with lightning.

But during the filming of a time-lapse video (watch HD version) over Myanmar (Burma) and Malaysia (map) on April 30, NASA astronauts unknowingly captured the rare sight.


Read the rest at National Geographic.

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