JavaScript and Cookies are required to view this site. Please enable both in your browser settings.
Colombia - Tourist Struck By Lightning On The Beach - Section 10

Colombia - Tourist Struck By Lightning On The Beach 

Current Rating:

Unlimited Views No Ads No Algorithms Lifetime Account

Documenting Reality

Community Forum · Est. 2006

Join Now
Thread Tools
  #91  
03-22-2024, 06:46 PM
Dwarvenforged's Avatar
Dwarvenforged
Offline:
My Rank: CORPORAL
Poster Rank:1388
Male
Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 425
 
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Quoted: 150 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 3/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssssss425
Re: Colombia - Tourist Struck By Lightning On The Beach

In retrospect, should have countered the lighting bolt.
▼ PROMO FROM DOCUMENTING REALITY
Real Car Crashes & Car Accident Videos
View Now
Hidden for upgraded members.
  #92  
03-28-2024, 05:52 AM
KillingJoke's Avatar
KillingJoke
Offline:
My Rank: SERGEANT
Poster Rank:1203
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 522
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 93 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 14/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssssss522
Re: Colombia - Tourist Struck By Lightning On The Beach

If you look at the video frame-by-frame you can see a trail of smoke from the sky directly to her then the lightning bolt follows that trail exactly. Weird. Anyone here know what's going on with that?
It's the formation of the plasma streamer. The electrical path of least resistance to ground starts, but is still at a very high resistance until the air becomes a plasma, forming the leader from the group up to the cloud, this plasma streamer is the visible high energy discharge.

Looking frame by frame, she was engulfed in a plasma ball for 160ms. I agree with those implying that much of the discharge would have been on the surface of her skin as she was wet with salt water, heart was possibly not stopped but fibrillating.

Note: with electro-convulsive treatment, the current is 0.8 amps, up to 450 volts. A lightening bolt is millions of volts, and thousands of amps, and it's "amps that kill".

Had someone performed immediate CPR, she might have lived.
And whoever saved her life would have likely gotten laid as a thank you, so, reason enough to take that CPR class, yo...
  #93  
03-28-2024, 07:27 AM
tecumseh35's Avatar
tecumseh35
Offline:
My Rank: SERGEANT MAJOR
Poster Rank:304
Male
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 4,206
 
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Quoted: 419 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 15/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss4206
Re: Colombia - Tourist Struck By Lightning On The Beach

Thought it was another beached whale for a second.


Powered by vBulletin Copyright 2000-2010 Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO