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Lightning, Thunder and Lightning Conductors

Chapter 2: LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
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About This Book

The lectures explain the electrical nature and physical causes of lightning and thunder, describe characteristic flashes and thunder-peal behavior, and compare atmospheric discharges with laboratory sparks and brush discharges. They review experiments that illuminate flash duration, brightness, and various forms such as forked, sheet, and globe lightning, and address phenomena like St. Elmo’s fire. Practical chapters analyze destructive effects on structures and life, outline principles and conditions for effective lightning conductors, and give rules for personal and property safety while warning of bad grounding and rival conductors. An appendix summarizes a contemporary scientific controversy over conductor theory, considering self-induction, experimental demonstrations, and arguments offered by several authorities.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE
The Electric Spark: A Type of a Flash of Lightning, 8
Cardboard Disc with Black and White Sectors; as Seen when at Rest, 12
Same Disc; as Seen when in Rapid Rotation, 12
The Brush Discharge, Illustrating St. Elmo’s Fire, 17
Origin of Successive Peals of Thunder, 22
Variations of Intensity in a Peal of Thunder, 24
Discharge of Leyden Jar Battery Through Thin Wires, 27
Glass Vessel Broken by Discharge of Leyden Jar Battery, 32
Gun Cotton Set on Fire by Electric Spark, 33
Volta’s Pistol; Explosion Caused by Electric Spark, 34
The Return Shock Illustrated, 35
Protection from Lightning by a Closed Conductor, 48
Induction Effect of Leyden Jar Discharge, 56