Sprites at Paranal Observatory

Amazing image of sprites at Paranal Observatory, captured from the VLT platform by ESO Photo Ambassador Petr Horálek.

Sprites are extremely rare atmosphere phemomena caused by irregularities in the ionosphere, high above storm clouds, at altitudes of about 80 kilometres. Typically seen as groups of red-orange flashes, they are triggered by positive cloud-to-ground lightning, which is rarer and more powerful than its negative counterpart, as the lightning discharge originates from the upper regions of the cloud, further from the ground. In a short burst, the sprite extends rapidly downwards, creating dangling red tendrils before disappearing.

The sprite pictured here was most likely over 500 kilometres away (compare with a satellite image showing the storm over Argentina), spanned a height of up to 80 kilometres and lasted only a fraction of a second.

Links:

Kredit:

P. Horálek/ESO

O snímku

Id:potw1505c
Typ:Fotografický
Datum zveřejnění:2. února 2015 10:00
Velikost:5787 x 3661 px

O objektu

Jméno:Cerro Paranal, Paranal
Typ:Unspecified : Sky Phenomenon : Night Sky
Unspecified : Technology : Observatory
Kategorie:Paranal

Image Formats


Zvětšovatelný


Pozadí

1024x768
281,0 KB
1280x1024
463,4 KB
1600x1200
684,6 KB
1920x1200
801,0 KB
2048x1536
1,2 MB