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Ball lightning in house
Ball lightning in house











ball lightning in house

ball lightning in house ball lightning in house

He pointed us to the current description of ball lightning provided by the American Meteorological Society. Karins told us that this is a subject he’s looked into many times. Since lighting is a weather phenomenon, The Debrief reached out to NBC News Chief Meteorologist Bill Karins to find out what was known about this subject in his branch of science. But a lightning bolt that is somehow captured in a shape resembling a globe seems very different. We began with the assumption that ball lighting is, in fact, actually “lightning.” Normal cloud-to-cloud or cloud-to-ground lightning is something nearly everyone has seen and it’s well understood. One of the most common responses was some variation of “the one filmed on the railroad tracks.” That video certainly does exist and it’s spectacular. While searching for better source material, we put the question to a variety of UFO enthusiasts on social media. Many balls of light are regularly filmed in the skies, but they don’t provide much in the way of data. One of the most frustrating aspects of the ball lightning debate is the lack of solid video or photographic evidence of reliable provenance. This leads to a number of understandable questions is ball lighting even real? And if so, how does it work? With this in mind, The Debrief decided to take a deep dive on the subject, speaking to experts and looking into some of the existing research on the often cited, but little-understood phenomenon that is ball lightning. Skeptics often dismiss sightings of UAP as ball lightning, yet for the many instances where it is cited, very little hard data about ball lightning is provided.

#BALL LIGHTNING IN HOUSE WINDOWS#

Some reports claim that they have even passed through closed glass windows into buildings where they vanish, sometimes accompanied by a popping sound. Generally described as a ball emitting light ranging in size from a beach ball to a city bus, these objects have reportedly been seen chasing aircraft at high altitudes and tremendous speed, or drifting slowly close to the ground. Of the many types of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) that are frequently reported, along with discs, triangles, and the more recent reports of “tic tacs,” another common variety involves “orbs” or spheres.













Ball lightning in house