Lightning Longer, Stronger and More Extreme

ASU professor Randy Cerveny credits “huge strides in the detection and monitoring of lightning events.”, Credit; Axel Rouvin/Flickr
It turns out lightning isn’t always a flash, and an Arizona State University (ASU) researcher says a pair of newly classified records for distance and duration reshaping our views of the electric weather phenomena might be just the beginning. The World Meteorological Organization has recently confirmed that a bolt over Oklahoma in 2007 covered a horizontal distance of nearly 200 miles (321 km), and a streak over southern France in 2012 lasted for nearly 8 seconds. “Our weather technology,” said Cerveny, chief rapporteur of climate and weather extremes for the WMO and instructor in the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning, “particularly with regard to lightning, has advanced rapidly in the last few years to now allow us to detect and measure lightning events that we previously had not been able to monitor and evaluate.” Cerveny said this is the first time lightning has been included in the official WMO extreme weather and climate archive, which is maintained by the organization’s Commission for Climatology and documents details of records for heat, cold, wind speed, rainfall and other related events. Full details of the lightning assessments are given in the online issue of the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, published Sept. 15. The WMO evaluation committee judged that the world’s longest detected distance for a single lightning bolt occurred over a horizontal distance of 199.5 miles. The event occurred on June 20, 2007, stretching from near Tulsa to near the Texas border. The committee also accepted the world’s longest detected duration for a single shock as a lightning event that lasted continuously for 7.74 seconds on Aug. 30, 2012, over Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France. Cerveny said researchers gathered their data from networks of sensors that monitor electromagnetic radiation triggered by lightning discharges. “The bursts are similar to the static you hear on an AM radio,” he said. “We can detect the static and its intensity. And through triangulation, we to find where the strike began and where it ended.” Cerveny said that with new technologies, weather researchers are entering a new phase in lightning detection and understanding. “This is the first study to address issues of lightning,” Cerveny said. “Over the next couple of decades I think we will see this field really take off.” He also said the findings highlight the importance of safety. “These extremes point out the need for everybody to be very aware when lightning occurs,” he said. “Lightning can strike far from where a storm is, so this research re-emphasizes the old safety advice that ‘when thunder roars, go indoors.’” 
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Doctors remove 18 cm tail from Nagpur boy's back

It's the longest recorded so far (Photo: AFP)
The doctors operated upon the 18-year-old boy with the 18 cm tail growing from the posterior end of the body on the back. Nagpur: A team of neurosurgeons at the government Super Specialty Hospital (SSH) here have successfully removed a 18-cm long human ‘tail’, apparently the longest recorded so far, from the back of a teenaged boy after its abnormal growth turned painful for him. The doctors operated upon the 18-year-old boy with the 18 cm tail growing from the posterior end of the body on the back. The head of the neurosurgery department and the team, Dr Pramod Giri on Tuesday said though the family knew about this unusual growth, they did not see a doctor due to the social stigma and superstition attached to it. Besides, it was not affecting his health anyway. “Generally, the defect is detected very early as it is present from birth and since it grows with age it cannot remain undetected. But the parents as well as the child hid the fact all these years. The defect can be surgically corrected within few months of birth,” the doctors said. When it became very painful for the boy, his parents brought him to SSH last week and was operated upon two days back. “When the size of the tail grew and a bone developed inside it, the tail
began to press on the boy’s back. It was cosmetically and psychologically disturbing for him. Hence the parents approached us,” Dr Giri explained. The patient was unable to sleep or sit properly. “Though the surgery is not very demanding, it is done by a neurosurgeon as it involves a part of the spinal cord. It arises from a compression at the tail end of the back and is medically referred as the neuro-development abnormality. This case is very rare and calls for a presentation in a medical journal as the tail is apparently the longest recorded so far,” Dr Giri claimed.Human tail generally manifests into problems related to bladder functioning — like lack of control of bowel. It can also result in pain and loss of function in lower limbs or legs.Dr Giri was assisted by two doctors from the neurosurgery department — Dr Divik Mittal and Dr Vivek Agrawal and anesthetists — Dr Lulu Fatema Vali, Dr Abhay Ganar and Dr Vaibhav Chouhan. Source: The Asian Age
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