Lightning will always remain mysterious to me, no matter how much I know about its creation. That’s probably because, for all we know about it, we still don’t know the exact mechanics behind a lightning strike. Now, researchers believe they may have created a tool that can re-create the conditions that cause lightning, allowing them to study this awe-inspiring phenomenon like never before.
In a new study published in Physical Review Letters, engineers led by Victor Pasko at Penn State proposed a small experimental device that could simulate lightning-like reactions in a controlled laboratory setting. The concept, appropriately and cutely described as “lightning in a box,” relies on relatively cheap materials and could fit comfortably on a desktop.
At least, in theory.
The idea builds on earlier work from Pasko’s team. In 2023, the researchers developed a model describing how lightning forms in thunderstorms. Their analysis suggested that lightning begins with a chain reaction called a “relativistic runaway electron avalanche.” In non-Science-y terms, strong electric fields speed up electrons in storm clouds. Those electrons then collide with nitrogen and oxygen molecules in the air, creating bursts of X-rays and photons. This energy cascade ultimately explodes as the bright flash we see during a lightning strike.
How to Put Lightning in a Thumb-Size Box
Scale is the real challenge to overcome here. Thunderstorms generate electrical potentials of roughly 100 million volts across massive cloud systems that stretch for miles on end. Reducing that down to a box that can — again, theoretically — fit on a desk sounds like an impossibility. Reproducing it in a laboratory is expensive.
Pasko’s team thinks dense materials could change all that. Their simulations tell them that solid blocks made from common insulating materials like glass, acrylic, or quartz might compress those lightninglike processes into a tiny space. Since these materials are denser than air, the same physical reactions could occur over a much shorter distance.
As the theory goes, a solid block smaller than a thumb could reproduce the early stages of the electron cascade that creates lightning. Once triggered, the feedback loop might sustain itself for long enough for scientists to study the process directly and under their strict control, without having to wait around for a natural lightning strike, instead being able to generate one on command.
Needless to say, this would be huge for atmospheric researchers and physicists.
One factor keeping this potentially game-changing innovation in the realm of theory is that researchers need to determine the minimum electric fields and electron-beam intensities required to trigger the reaction. If that’s ever sorted, expect an avalanche of breakthroughs in our knowledge of how lightning works.
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