2020-03-01, 21:57
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-51681760
Anak Krakatau: Lightning frenzy points to scale of volcanic plume
So the question. Could these strikes be detected? Is their anything different about them?
Given a map of volcanoes, could the system be used to detect eruptions and perhaps provide early warnings?
http://volcano.oregonstate.edu/volcano_table has lat long of some volcanos
Smithsonian has a list of current erruptions
https://volcano.si.edu/gvp_currenteruptions.cfm
You would expect any lightening to be pretty fixed, even if the wind is blowing. That rules out most moving weather systems.
One problem, being a mountain, they do tend to trigger cu nims anyway.
Nick
Anak Krakatau: Lightning frenzy points to scale of volcanic plume
So the question. Could these strikes be detected? Is their anything different about them?
Given a map of volcanoes, could the system be used to detect eruptions and perhaps provide early warnings?
http://volcano.oregonstate.edu/volcano_table has lat long of some volcanos
Smithsonian has a list of current erruptions
https://volcano.si.edu/gvp_currenteruptions.cfm
You would expect any lightening to be pretty fixed, even if the wind is blowing. That rules out most moving weather systems.
One problem, being a mountain, they do tend to trigger cu nims anyway.
Nick