Lightning! Urgently!

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·@leonid96·
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Lightning! Urgently!
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<p>When &nbsp;scientists invented the lightning rod and tested it (at the cost of &nbsp;several physicists), the euphoria of the apparent victory over the &nbsp;forces of Nature was so great that lavish receptions and solemn balls &nbsp;were held in honor of the winners. Many Parisian women of fashion immediately included in their outfit &nbsp;or woven in the hair of the most real metal rods lightning rods, and &nbsp;enlightened people, professors and intellectuals began to wear steel &nbsp;wire in the pockets of jackets or replaced their traditional wooden &nbsp;canes with iron.<br>
 Then &nbsp;among literate people, the belief in lightning was higher than that of &nbsp;sorcerers, faith in the power of talismans and amulets. Half &nbsp;a century or a century will pass, steel rods will be dug into the &nbsp;ground not only in the centers of university towns, but also in &nbsp;factories, factories, along roads and even on god-forgotten farms and &nbsp;farms. In some countries, for example in Singapore, where 200 lightning days &nbsp;a year, portable lightning rods in the form of tripods (manufactured in &nbsp;Australia) are even used in the army.<br>
 Was there a complete victory ?! Over the last century, the number of victims of lightning has a steady tendency to increase. For &nbsp;example, only in France, where about a million lightning strikes &nbsp;annually, dozens of people die and about 10,000 cows die. [5] 1 ... In &nbsp;the US, an average of 80 people per year die from lightning, up to 160 &nbsp;in Zimbabwe (there one day in a month 89 people died) ...<br>
 In &nbsp;1966, in the Vologda region, on the bank of the river, lightning struck &nbsp;a flock of sheep who had lost their fear in one large pile, and killed &nbsp;all-only 101 sheep. On December 23, 1975, lightning set its own record, killing 21 people &nbsp;at once, after a direct hit in a hut in Chinamasa-Krael, near Matari in &nbsp;Zimbabwe.<br>
 By &nbsp;the way, with such accuracy of hitting a person (about 10 thousand &nbsp;strokes are spent on one killed), lightning can be compared to bullets &nbsp;(which, for example, spend one killed enemy from 1 to 100 thousand &nbsp;during the position wars). It would be as if our whole earth is one big shooting gallery or a front-line strip shot through right through.<br>
 Probably, without lightning rods, the number of victims would be even greater, but they could not fully protect us. More &nbsp;precisely, they perfectly protect us from "electrical breakdowns from &nbsp;the clouds," that is, from what they believed lightning after the &nbsp;discovery of electricity. "Lightning &nbsp;is a discharge of current up to 3 billion Joules, moving from the cloud &nbsp;downward at speeds of 160-1600 km / s (and 140,000 km / s - with half &nbsp;the speed of light sometimes moving back from earth to clouds) through &nbsp;an ionized air channel with a plasma temperature up &nbsp;to 30,000 degrees (5 times higher than on the Sun), with a channel &nbsp;diameter of 1.27 cm, surrounded by a 3-6-meter crown, a length of 90 to &nbsp;32 km and accompanied by a sonic shock wave (thunder), sometimes audible &nbsp;distance up to 29 km ... "- such statistical information has accumulated about lightning all-knowing science.<br>
 Yes, lightning obeys most of the laws of the distribution of electrical discharges, but ... not everyone and not always! Yes, &nbsp;lightning consists of electric charge, but ... either we do not really &nbsp;know what electricity is, or lightning includes not only electricity! Yes, &nbsp;weather forecasters in most cases predict the onset of thunderstorm &nbsp;days, but ... the behavior of lightning in many cases can not be &nbsp;predicted and understood! As for fireballs, yes, they appear in thunderstorm hours, but also appear on absolutely clear days!<br>
 There &nbsp;are many strange lightning stories, one case is more surprising than &nbsp;another: lightning burns clothes, leaving the top dress. Or shaves off all the hair to the last. He tears metal objects from his hands, throwing them away for a long distance and without causing harm to the one holding it. Lightning &nbsp;fuses in a common ingot all the coins that were in the purse, or silver &nbsp;gold and gilds silver, without burning paper money lying with them. Lightning completely destroys the necklace on the chain, leaving a &nbsp;memory of a girl robbed by her, an imprint of a chain and a medallion &nbsp;that has not come off the skin for several years.<br>
And what are your stories about lightning? ..&nbsp;</p>
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