A dirty thunderstorm (also volcanic lightning, thunder volcano) is a weather phenomenon that is related to the production of lightning in a volcanic plume.
A study in the journal Science indicated that electrical charges are generated when rock fragments, ash, and ice particles in a volcanic plume collide and produce static charges, just as ice particles collide in regular thunderstorms.
Volcanic eruptions are sometimes accompanied by flashes of lightning. However, this lightning doesn’t descend from storm clouds in the sky. It is generated within the ash cloud spewing from the volcano, in a process called charge separation.
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Solar System
Comet Hale-Bopp
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Known as the Horsehead Nebula – but you can call it Starbiscuit.
Found by our Hubble Space Telescope, this beauty is part of a much larger complex in the constellation Orion.
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Lunar Focus
In early 2001 during a launch of Atlantis, the Sun, Earth, Moon, and rocket were all properly aligned for this photogenic coincidence.
Image Credit: Pat McCracken, NASA
Total Solar Eclipse, 2019. Credits: ESA/CESAR
Total solar eclipse, 2 July 2019.
Credits: ESA/CESAR
The Big Dipper
by: VegaStar Carpentier