Image Credit: ISS Expedition 31 Crew, NASA
Sunday, September 2, 2012
NASA Photo of the Day
August 29:
A Dark Earth with a Red Sprite
Image Credit: ISS Expedition 31 Crew, NASA
Explanation:
There is something very unusual in this picture of the Earth -- can you find it?
A fleeting phenomenon once thought to be only a legend has been newly caught if you know just where to look.
The above image
was taken from the orbiting
International Space Station (ISS)
in late April and shows familiar ISS solar panels on the far left and part of a robotic arm to the far right.
The rarely imaged phenomenon is known as a
red sprite and it
can be seen,
albeit faintly, just over the bright area on the image right.
This bright area and the red sprite
are different types of lightning,
with the white flash the more typical type.
Although sprites have been reported
anecdotally for as long as 300 years, they were first caught on film in 1989 -- by accident.
Much remains unknown about
sprites including how they occur, their effect on the atmospheric
global electric circuit,
and if they are somehow related to other
upper atmospheric lightning
phenomena such as
blue jets or
terrestrial gamma flashes.
Image Credit: ISS Expedition 31 Crew, NASA
Labels:
cool stuff,
Didn't Know That
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