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Great Plains lighting bolt spanning three states sets shocking record
Great Plains lighting bolt spanning three states sets shocking record

UPI

time05-08-2025

  • Science
  • UPI

Great Plains lighting bolt spanning three states sets shocking record

1 of 2 | An image from NOAA's advanced GOES-16 satellite of the thunderstorm helped verify the record size of a megaflash lightning bolt on October 22, 2017. Photo by NOAA Aug. 5 (UPI) -- A massive lightning bolt that stretched from eastern Texas to just outside of Kansas City, Mo., has been officially recognized as the largest recorded flash by the World Meteorological Organization. The lightning bolt was generated by a major cluster of thunderstorms that swept over the Great Plains on Oct. 22, 2017, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Monday. Researchers used advanced satellite technology to capture the flash's enormous span, and they hope it will help them better understand how lightning affects people. Despite the bolt having a horizontal distance of 515 miles, it was not identified in the original analysis of the thunderstorm and researchers took note of it during a recent re-examination, according to NOAA. The World Meteorological Organization's Committee on Weather and Climate Extremes used NOAA's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite, the most advanced satellite technology available, to verify the length of the flash and recognize it as a new record, according to a press release from the organization. Researchers had previously used data collected by ground-based technology to measure lightning flashes, according to the press release. The use of satellite technology allowed researchers to observe a larger area. "Over time as the data record continues to expand, we will be able to observe even the rarest types of extreme lightning on Earth and investigate the broad impacts of lightning on society," Michael J. Peterson, a researcher at the Georgia Institute of Technology's Severe Storms Research Center and member of the committee, said in the press release. The lightning bolt's length is about the same distance between Paris, France, and Venice, Italy, according to the World Meteorological Organization. It would take about eight to nine hours to cover the same distance by car and about 90 minutes for a commercial plane. The previous record was for a lightning bolt that spanned 477 miles across parts of the southern U.S. on April 29, 2020. The Great Plains region is known for its large thunderstorms that also give rise to lightning "megaflashes" that extend over expansive distances or have longer durations. WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo said in a statement that while "lightning is a source of wonder," it is also a deadly hazard. "These new findings highlight important public safety concerns about electrified clouds which can produce flashes which travel extremely large distances and have a major impact on the aviation sector and can spark wildfires," Saulo said.

Megaflash: Longest lightning strike ever recorded spanned 829km
Megaflash: Longest lightning strike ever recorded spanned 829km

NZ Herald

time31-07-2025

  • Science
  • NZ Herald

Megaflash: Longest lightning strike ever recorded spanned 829km

'These new findings highlight important public safety concerns about electrified clouds which can produce flashes which travel extremely large distances and have a major impact on the aviation sector and can spark wildfires,' Celeste Saulo, the secretary general for the World Meteorological Organization, said in a statement about the discovery. Lightning specialists are calling the episode a 'megaflash', noted for its exceptional duration and size. They can occur in sprawling storm clusters and complexes that have horizontally expansive areas of electric charge. Most thunderstorms are fewer than 10 miles (16km) tall, so to get a megaflash, you'd need a long or wide thunderstorm complex. A satellite image depicting the flash. Photo / American Meteorological Society The WMO's committee on weather and climate extremes used data from the GOES 16, 17, 18 and 19 satellites, positioned some 22,236 miles (35,785km) above Earth's surface, to map the origin of the flash. Each satellite has the ability to sense lightning discharges from above, even if they don't strike the ground. That data was then merged with ground-based lightning strike data from the Earth Networks Total Lightning Network. It was found that the same ultra-expansive flash also produced 64 bolts that struck the ground. 'The extremes of what lightning is capable of is difficult to study because it pushes the boundaries of what we can practically observe,' said evaluation committee member Michael J. Peterson, a researcher at the Georgia Tech. Adding observations from satellites was the final piece of the puzzle, he noted. Megaflashes are also known to be long in duration. On June 18, 2020, an enormous bolt spent a total of 17.1 seconds discharging over Uruguay and northern Argentina. 'The duration of this flash was over seven seconds,' Randy Cerveny, a researcher and professor at Arizona State, said in an email. Megaflash research helps scientists understand how geographically expansive lightning hazards can be, particularly since flashes can evidently travel far distances from the initial region in the cloud containing charge. Scientists have coined a term – 'bolt from the grey'. 'This type of lightning event, a mega flash, typifies the kind of flash that appears to come from 'clear skies,'' Cerveny added. But, as with all lightning, it 'actually does come from a thunderstorm ... from a very great distance. These mega flashes can travel immense distances from their origin point'. In its new announcement, the WMO also referenced two other lightning records – both for fatality counts from single strikes. In 1975, 21 people in Zimbabwe were killed by a bolt as they huddled inside a hut for safety. And in 1994, 469 people were killed in Dronka, Egypt when lighting struck a set of oil tanks, sparking a fire and causing burning oil to flood the town. Matthew Cappucci is a meteorologist for Capital Weather Gang and has contributed to The Washington Post since he was 18.

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