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, 18 2007 . 20:59 +
mnogo_i_ni4ego
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(c) mnogo_i_ni4ego
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Little_girl_wants_be_kiss   Re: , 18 2007 . 21:45 ()
   
Jane_sXe   , 19 2007 . 02:26 ()
5 :)
   
   , 17 2024 . 00:39 ()


. , , . 17 . , , . , , . , . , , - .
, . 40 000 , 1200 . , 3000 . , . , . , , , . , , , , . . , . .
: . , . . , . . 16-18 , 19 . , . -. - , . , . . 16 , , , . , , . , , . , . 10 , . 13 , 20 . . , . 30 . , . , 12 , , , . , , . . .

Protection against ball lightning in history

Shutters were used to protect against ball lightning. Many people wonder why shutters were used before, and this was done everywhere even when glass was already actively used. The answer is contained in a 17th century Polish drawing from the city of Lübeck. It shows shutters being approached and bounced off by what might be called ball lightning. In Europe, in particular in Rus', certain balls with faces inside were often depicted on shutters. It is believed that this is the Sun. However, another version says that these are additional drawings-amulets against ball lightning. This suggests that the problem of ball lightning was recognized even by the common population. Today in Russia, according to some estimates, ball lightning causes 40,000 fires, in which about 1,200 people die. American studies indicate that the death toll in the United States could reach 3,000 people. Although wooden shutters are not able to stop ball lightning, they can significantly reduce the damage from its explosion or fire when trying to enter the house. Ball lightning easily penetrates modern homes through ventilation, sockets and windows. Ball lightning passes through glass, melting it, and often passes through it without leaving a trace. Wooden shutters, which, like glass, are not a conductor, were tried to be made quite thick, which is much better in this regard than thin glass. Many shutters had additional metal plates on the outside. According to some researchers, this element could serve to disperse ball lightning. For the same reason, valves could also be installed on fireplaces. Many buildings in Europe and Asia from antiquity and the Middle Ages have numerous elements of two types: metal fences and various peaks. In many European houses of the past, metal battens were found inside the walls, running along the wall. Most of them clearly cannot serve as reinforcement. A number of researchers believe that these two elements could be used to protect against ball lightning. Metal fences and metal circuits inside the room served as an analogue of Faraday cages. In drawings from the 16th to 18th centuries, and in photographs from the 19th century, pillars with bars are also often found on the streets. Peaks are found on the roofs of stone and wooden buildings and fences. There are peaks in the form of monument columns. The peaks played the role of a pre-emptive spark gap - it is assumed that during the period of increased atmospheric electricity, they prevented the occurrence of ball lightning with a corona discharge. The prevalence of these elements suggests that the problem was very urgent. In Europe, the corona discharge was called holy fires. In 16th century Italy it was said that although such lights look scary, they prevent the appearance of truly terrible fires, that is, ball lightning. If holy fires are described as having a purple color, then more terrible lights could be of a variety of colors, which is a sign of ball lightning. Charles Dufay writes about ball lightning as a phenomenon more frequent and much more dangerous than ordinary lightning, hurricane and hail. They posed a danger, since even in stone buildings the ceilings were made of wood. A 10th century English chronicle states that half of the fires in Northumbria are caused by "glowing balls". A 13th-century Russian source reports that in December, residents of Tver saw about 20 luminous objects in the sky every day. Some of them caused forest fires and house fires. The first editions of the book on the phenomenon of ball lightning by the French physicist Dominique Arago included thousands of descriptions of ball lightning, most of which were observed in his time. Subsequent editions included only 30 descriptions. Obviously, the reason for this could be fear of this phenomenon. Today, scientists believe that the earliest description of ball lightning was made in the 12th century, which, of course, cannot be. Its just that scientists dont want to see early numerous descriptions, for example, from Egypt. The entire history of mankind is permeated with the plot of complex relationships with ball lightning. Its echoes range from beads to Christmas tree decorations.
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