In this video, We'll talk about SCIENTISTS ARE SCARED of STRANGE behavior of RED LIGHTNING on EARTH! Welcome to our channel Space Crave Here we discuss everything about Space. Make sure to subscribe and never miss a single video. Scientists Are Scared of Strange Behavior of Red Lightning On Earth What are these glowing orbs that are swooping through the sky everywhere? Are they an accident of nature or an omen of doom? Let's find out that thunderstorms have always been connected to thunder and lightning, which has fascinated and frightened people throughout history. The Greeks introduced The Flash along with Zeus, the most powerful of the Gods, in Antiquity, and even though people today are aware of the electrical nature of this natural occurrence, not all of its Secrets have yet been revealed in the higher reaches of the night sky, for example strange light phenomena have frequently been seen some of them could be explained by the existence of alien life. When John R. Winkler and his colleagues at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis observed one of the video camera's most mysterious phenomena in 1990, the majority of scientists took these claims seriously. Images for the first time displayed entirely novel types of flashes. Since then, there have been active attempts to document these discharges in the upper air envelope, and hundreds of them have been observed from space shuttle aircraft and the ground, demonstrating that lightning discharges frequently occur in the thin air layers up to 90 kilometres above the clouds in addition to the occasionally spectacular flashes that occur in the lowest air layers between thunderclouds and the Earth. In retrospect, it's amazing that we weren't able to document these discharges earlier. As part of a project funded by the National Science Foundation, Jason Ahrns, a graduate student at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, and other researchers from the U.S. Air Force Academy and Fort Lewis College have been on a mission. The group has been searching for sprites this summer by flying many times in the Gulfstream V research aircraft of the National Center for Atmospheric Research for a total of 30 hours. Electrical discharges known as sprites, commonly referred to as red lightning, are visible above clouds during thunderstorms. Similar to the naughty air spirits of the fantasy land for which they are named, the weather phenomena is difficult to detect and even harder to capture on camera since it is so brief (sprites flash for just milliseconds), and for the most part not visible from the ground. With the aid of DSLR cameras and high-speed video cameras positioned in the plane's window, Ahrns and his colleagues have, however, managed to take some incredibly uncommon pictures of the red lightning. Sprites and other types of upper atmospheric lightning are produced by physical and chemical mechanisms that the researchers seek to better understand. Let's start by defining a sprite. A type of electrical discharge in the high atmosphere known as a sprite is connected to thunderstorms. The air above the cloud is ionised by a sizable electric field caused by a few lightning strikes, which causes the cloud to emit the light shown in the images. The obvious comparison to the common lightning strikes we frequently witness is inevitable, but I prefer to emphasise how much higher the sprites are, with the tops rising up to 100 kilometres and higher. A sprite can grow to a height of 50 kilometres, whereas a lightning bolt may only travel about 10 kilometres from a cloud to the ground. #redlight #scared #scientists Keyword:lightning,RED LIGHTNING,SCIENTISTS ARE SCARED,accident of nature,lightning striking ground,lightning strike,lightning strikes,Scared,thunderstorm,lightning storm,lightning bolt,caught on camera,thunder,lightning caught on camera,rolling thunder,ball lightning,upward lightning,lightning strikes again,weather,lightning facts,thunderstorm sounds,thunder and lightning,heavy thunderstorm,lightning crashes,almost hit by lightning,severe weather