9/13/2023 0 Comments Purple lightning storm![]() All of the original staffs have been preserved and remastered in the Zombies Chronicles (DLC 5) pack for Black Ops 3. As usual, the guide contains a detailed walkthrough together with puzzle solutions and screenshots to help you out. In this guide I'll show you a faster way to get this done and also cover the complete steps for upgrading the Electric Staff and enjoying what is an excellent adversary. Sorry it is not brighter but by this time the storms were around 15 miles away to my east.The Lightning Staff is one of the underloved staffs in Origins, mainly because of it's time consuming part collection and upgrade process. The snap below is from a distant flash - notice the reds, blues and whites (albeit feint) and the redness on the horizon looking east. This may explain the red and white/blue tints to the lightning at the end of the night - red on the horizon but blue/white when closer. ![]() I can see on mu video a slight red tint to the blackness on the horizon, possibly from the sun just behind the horizon ahead of sunrise. The storm on Saturday morning occurred in a plume scenario, air quality was poor and it happened overnight and continued on towards dawn. Incidentally the pink lightning I have witnessed has always been during the evening hours (i.e. only ever blue, white or occasionally pink. I have never seen overhead or close lightning that is red. If you apply this same science to lightning it could explain red/orange lightning when a distance away and on the horizon. This is only apparent when the moon is fairly low in the sky though, and never when the moon is overhead. I know pollutants in the atmosphere can make the moon appear red because of the way the pollutants affect the wavelengths that can get through. There's more to this subject that at first appeared, methinks? The only purple-pink flashes were during those dusty Continental plumes, such as in August 1997. Edited Jby Thunderbolt_Īh, Supacell you have reminded of the lightning I saw when I was in Scotland.ĩ9% of all lightning flashes I ever saw (mostly during the winter months) were blue-white. I hope you stuck with it, and thanks for reading. Well that was a bit of fulminology for you there. Green-tinted lightning is also occasionally seen, and this may be caused by the lightning heating up certain gases in the air, giving it a greenish tint. These colours also tend to be observed near the base of the lightning, as it strikes the ground. ![]() Orange and red lightning has been observed and these bolts tend to be some of the coldest lightning. Other colours of lightning have also been reported. They also tend to be indicative of dry thunderstorms, so the presence of yellow-tinted lightning could mean that an approaching thunderstorm is a low-precipitation storm. Yellow lightning bolts are much more uncommon and tend to be cooler than blue, white and lilac lightning bolts are. White lightning is also the some of the hottest lightning that occurs on earth (after blue lightning). This means that to observe it, the air must be free of pollutants and dust which can scatter and refract light - so essentially you're seeing the lightning with very little interference from the atmosphere. The light radiated by virtually all lightning bolts is white. This is because these dust particles scatter the light coming from the lightning, in a similar way to how molecules in the atmosphere scatter the sun's light, making the sky also look blue. Atmospheric-wise, they maybe caused by small amounts of dust in the atmosphere. They are also some of the more commonly observed colours (after lilac lightning). Lilac lightning is also rumoured to produce louder thunder, though this is disputed.īlue lightning bolts tend to be the hottest lightning bolts to occur on earth. It is often caused by precipitation, so the observation of it most likely means that the thunderstorm generating it will be a high-precipitation storm. Lilac or purple-tinted lightning is usually the most commonly observed colour. This ranges from the temperature of the lightning to atmospheric and environmental conditions, as mentioned below: There are many causes for this wide variety of colours. ![]() ![]() As I'm sure you're aware, lightning bolts can display a wide variety of colours ranging from lilac, white and blue, to even more exotic colours like yellow, orange and even green. ![]()
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