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Watch sprite lightning flash at 10,000 frames per second Nancy Atkinson – Universe Today Published August 7, 2013 ... Top GIF animated from footage captured by Jason Ahrns.
Virgin Media has revealed the next chapter in its ‘Switch to Super’ campaign – a high-octane rescue mission starring long-term brand ambassador Usain Bolt in animated form.
Lightning Bolt embark on their first European tour since 2009 this summer. They will only play one UK date on the run, at London’s Roundhouse on June 28, performing on a bill which also includes ...
Lightning travels at speeds of up to 200 million miles per hour. It comes, quite literally, in a flash, and often disappears before you can reach for your camera. That makes it hard to photograph ...
TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — The Tampa Bay Lightning will air a real-time, animated broadcast for the team’s game against the New York Islanders later this month. The animated program will feature ...
This awesome video, shot on May 20 by physicist Ningyu Liu from the Florida Institute of Technology, records a bolt of lightning at 7,000 frames per second - which means it's slow enough for us to ...
Researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel have created a map (pictured) showing lightning strikes around the world. The map was creating using a global network of 70 lightning stations.
Not one, two or three — but four lightning bolts zap the city’s tallest buildings all at once in a dazzling display of electrical discharge. But these aren’t ordinary lightning bolts. They ...
Superdog Bolt and his person, Penny, jump into action in the new Disney animated feature 'Bolt.' Disney's latest animated offering, the puppy-dog tale "Bolt, " might not quite capture lightning in ...
PointsBet did not confirm whether brand ambassador Drew Brees had been struck by lightning . ... star is seen jumping out of an ambulance before getting electrocuted by an animated lightning bolt.
Two electrical engineers caught the rare spectacle on camera in the Ebro Valley of north eastern Spain. The duo shot the footage in slow motion, taking 11,000 frames a second.
A perfectly timed photo shows New York’s One World Trade Center framed by two bolts of lightning striking the Hudson River in lower Manhattan. The image was captured by NYC-based photographer Gary ...