Nature unleashes a torrent of energy as ash fills the air: After
lying dormant for more than 9,000 years, the Chaitén volcano belched
forth a 40,000-foot-tall ash plume in early May, touching off lightning
and a monthlong eruption. The volcano, situated 700 miles south of
Santiago, Chile, forced the evacuation of 8,000 people from the nearby
village of Chaitén. It was roughly comparable in size to the 1980 Mount
St. Helens eruption that released hundreds of millions of tons of debris
in an explosion 1,000 times as powerful as the atomic bomb that was
dropped on Nagasaki.
Scientists suspect that volcanic lightning results from particles in
the ash cloud rubbing together as the plume swirls. They aren’t sure
about which types of particles generate the most static electricity, nor
do they know how much energy is produced during the event. Of course,
the lack of research done in the field is understandable: Even
scientists, when they see an erupting, lightning-spewing volcano, tend
to run in the opposite direction.
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