…wie der Blitz! Denn das ist das von Ralf mitgebrachte Thema dieser Folge. Wir versuchen zu beantworten, was Supernovae mit Gewittern zu tun haben und erfahren dabei Schicksale von menschlichen Blitzableitern.
Frage des Tages: Warum ist Eis rutschig?
Shownotes
Frage des Tages
Dr Ben Miles (Youtube): We FINALLY Proved Why Ice Is SlipperyVeritasium (Youtube): Why Is Ice Slippery?Hong et al. (2024) Imaging surface structure and premelting of ice Ih with atomic resolutionWeber et al. (2018) Molecular Insight into the Slipperiness of IceRobert Rosenberg (2005) Why Is Ice Slippery?Hauptthema
Wikipedia (de): BlitzWikipedia (en): LightningWikipedia (de): Roy SullivanWikipedia (de): ElmsfeuerWikipedia (de): SonnenaktivitätWikipedia (en): Lake MaracaiboTandberg, J. (1933) Cosmic Rays and Lightning. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/132712c0Hare et al. (2017) Do cosmic ray air showers initiate lightning? […]. JGR Atmospheres. https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JD025949Chum et al. (2024) Solar cycle signatures in lightning activity. EGU. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-24-9119-2024Schellart et al. (2015) Probing Atmospheric Electric Fields in Thunderstorms through Radio Emission from Cosmic-Ray-Induced Air Showers. Physical Review Letters. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.165001Kumar et al. (2018) Lightning Discharges, Cosmic Rays and Climate. Surveys in Geophysics. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10712-018-9469-zBusiness Insider: Space images show 477-mile lightning ‚megaflash‘Imagine Dragons: Thunder (Youtube)