DocumentCode
1045818
Title
Lightning
Author
Creighton, E.E.F.
Author_Institution
Consulting Engineer, General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
fYear
1924
Firstpage
1197
Lastpage
1204
Abstract
By the use of some new experimental data of the resistance of conducting vapors the conclusion is reached that the current in a streak of lightning oscillates. Starting with experimental value of 4500 volts per centimeter, as the average potential gradient for the electrostatic field between the thunder-cloud and earth, some astonishingly high values for the factors involved in lightning resulted. For more than a decade the average current in a lightning stroke of 10,000 amperes has been accepted. The calculations in this paper show a value as great as one-and-a-half-million amperes. Some of the other factors correspondingly large are as follows: The energy stored in the electrostatic field is 700 kilowatt-hours. The maximum power expended in the discharge is 860-billion kilowatts. The frequency for the particular stroke calculated, one mile long, is lower than former estimates,?? about 50,000 cycles per second. Calculations were made of a bolt of lightning which struck a wooden pole protected by a No. 6 wire. The results agree with the independent calculations of the factors given above of a lightning stroke. In later the subject will be pursued further, and the equation will be recorded.
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Transactions of the
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-3860
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/T-AIEE.1924.5061069
Filename
5061069
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