Abstract
IS there such a phenomenon as dark lightning? This is a question that has often been raised, and as yet no satisfactory answer has been given. If dark flashes do really occur, then they should probably be both seen and photographed, and the former, one would think, would be the more simple way of recording them. A difficulty, however, here arises, for if we assume that both dark and bright flashes occur during a thunderstorm, then we must be careful not to mistake retina-fatigue dark flashes for actual dark flashes if they exist. Lord Kelvin (NATURE, vol. lx. p. 341) has lately pointed out how, during a recent storm, he was able to confirm the existence of these apparent dark flashes; and in a more recent number of this journal (vol. lx. p. 391) I published some observations corroborating the same view. It must be pointed out, however, that, although such observations indicate that the majority of dark flashes seen may be attributed to the cause of fatigue of the retina, it does not necessarily follow that dark flashes do not actually occur. Eye observations, therefore, do not help us as yet to give a satisfactory answer to this question.
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LOCKYER, W. Dark Lightning Flashes. Nature 60, 570–574 (1899). https://doi.org/10.1038/060570a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/060570a0