NASA astronauts recorded the amazing beauty of a lightning moment from space.
According to RCO News AgencyYou may have experienced a storm with lightning throughout your life. In this wild and sound event, there are lights that break the sky, and the sound of a tremor that shakes the body.
Although thunderstorms are common in the land, there are still many things about this phenomenon that we do not know. Scientists have launched various equipment to discover this phenomenon and have made great progress in understanding the momentary processes that occur in a thunderstorm.
However, sometimes a new perspective can help, and the astronauts present at the International Space Station can be useful. Using the technologies developed by NASA’s famous NASA astronaut Don Pettit, they shot powerful thunder storms about 2 kilometers above ground level.
Members of Mission 1 at the Space Station have released new lightning images on the X -Social Network (former Twitter). Each image is recorded at 2 frames per second, and the bright bright light that appears to shine through the clouds is displayed only for a moment.
Seeing thunderstorms from the top of the clouds can reveal details of the phenomenon that we cannot see from the ground. We were not aware of the reverse thunderstorms called “Blue Jets” until a missile was observed. Space observations were critical to understand how it works.
Satellite data can also be used to study the abundance and distribution of storms and show the activity of “Killer Electrons” that are launched into space when the atmosphere occurs. The interaction between thunderstorms and high climate is not well understood, and orbital observations can help scientists study it.
However, it is sometimes good to do something just because you can. Not everyone has the chance to shoot one of the biggest amazing and irregular phenomena of the earth from hundreds of kilometers above the ground. Now we can enjoy them.
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RCO NEWS