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1.
Am J Forensic Med Pathol ; 22(3): 296-8, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11563744

ABSTRACT

A healthy 20-year-old man failed to return home after a jog in the Colorado mountains. His lifeless body was found the next day on an exposed mountain slope. The differential diagnosis in such mysterious, unwitnessed mountain deaths includes cardiac arrhythmia, cerebral hemorrhage, pulmonary embolism, seizures, trauma, high-altitude sickness, and hypothermia. The cause of death in this case was established on postmortem examination. The findings of ruptured tympanic membranes and a melted shoe established this as a case of lightning strike fatality. The National Lightning Detection Network can be a valuable resource to investigators by providing information on the location and date of lightning strikes in the vicinity of the victim.


Subject(s)
Lightning Injuries/pathology , Tympanic Membrane/injuries , Adult , Autopsy , Death, Sudden/pathology , Humans , Male , Mountaineering , Running , Rupture/pathology
2.
Neurology ; 48(3): 683-6, 1997 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9065548

ABSTRACT

We report an extraordinary event of a lightning strike to the head of a helmeted bicyclist that occurred under fair weather conditions with a cloudless sky. The patient sustained a cardiac arrest and hypoxic encephalopathy with residual neurologic impairment. With the availability of highly developed meteorologic equipment, we were able to determine that the lightning "bolt from the blue" probably originated in a thunderstorm that was about 16 km away and obscured by the mountains.


Subject(s)
Burns/therapy , Craniocerebral Trauma/therapy , Lightning Injuries/therapy , Multiple Trauma/therapy , Brain Injuries/diagnosis , Brain Injuries/therapy , Craniocerebral Trauma/diagnosis , Glasgow Coma Scale , Humans , Lightning Injuries/diagnosis , Male , Middle Aged , Multiple Trauma/diagnosis , Ventricular Fibrillation/therapy
3.
Semin Neurol ; 15(3): 227-32, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8570924

Subject(s)
Environment , Lightning
4.
Science ; 246(4929): 457-64, 1989 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17788696

ABSTRACT

Recent research on lightning has been motivated, in part, by the desire to prevent spectacular accidents, such as occurred in 1969 during the launch of Apollo 12 and in 1987 during the launch of Atlas-Centaur 67, and by the need to protect advanced ground-based and airborne systems that utilize low voltage, solid-state electronics. The present understanding of both natural and artificially initiated (triggered) lightning is reviewed, and suggestions are given for future research that can improve our understanding both of the physics of lightning and the parameters that are important for protection.

5.
Science ; 245(4918): 622-4, 1989 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17837615

ABSTRACT

When Earth-orbiting spacecraft are exposed to large fluxes of energetic charged particles, electric discharges occur on circuit boards, solar panels, and other dielectric surfaces. Large fluxes of energetic partides can produce such discharges on natural materials in the solar system. Surface discharges will occur under a variety of conditions, but particularly favorable environments are expected to occur within the magnetospheres of the giant planets; an example is the surface of Io.

6.
Science ; 201(4350): 9-16, 1978 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17777737

ABSTRACT

A lightning flash that struck the 150-meter weather tower at Kennedy Space Center was studied by several research groups using varioul techniques. The flash had unusually large peak currents and a stepped leader of relatively short duration. The charged regions neutralized by the three return strokes were located within a horizontal layer between heights of about 6 and 8 kilometers, where environmental temperatures were about -10 degrees to -20 degrees C. The charge source for the first return stroke coincided with a vertical shaft of precipitation inferred to have been graupel or hail. Charge sources for subsequent strokes were near the edge of the detectable precipitation echo. The overall channel length was about 10 kilometers. A Vertically oriented intracloud discharge occurred after the three return strokes.

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