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I watched it for the lightning, but it had a large section devoted to the
shuttle and the famous "purple streak" photo. They showed the photo, which looked like purple lightning hitting Columbia. The photo was a 6 second exposure, as the bolt hit the trail behind Columbia noticeably brightened and stayed brighter than it was before the hit. Another observer was recording infrasound on a network designed to detect nuclear explosions. At the time of the supposed lightning "hit" a sound could be heard which was "out of profile" for a typical shuttle re-entry. The Shuttle has no shielding against lightning strikes. The program went on to explain that new types of lightning are being discovered, sixty times more powerful than normal lightning. It fires up from the cloud. Columbia was actually taking photos of this lightning phenomenon during it's mission. It managed to capture lightning being triggered by incoming meteors with no clouds present. This would have been the same scenario as Columbia during re-entry. What was indicated by this program was that Columbia was hit by an electrical discharge during re-entry. Whether this caused the break up, or contributed to it is unknown. But it could be a factor to consider. -- Kerwin Robertson |
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