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Article

Explosions of Ball Lightning inside Enclosed Spaces

by
Anatoly I. Nikitin
*,
Vadim A. Nikitin
,
Alexander M. Velichko
and
Tamara F. Nikitina
V.L. Talrose Institute for Energy Problems of Chemical Physics at N.N. Semenov Federal Research Center for Chemical Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 119334, Russia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Atmosphere 2024, 15(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15010002
Submission received: 27 October 2023 / Revised: 1 December 2023 / Accepted: 14 December 2023 / Published: 20 December 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers in Upper Atmosphere)

Abstract

:
According to observations, the energy density contained inside ball lightning can reach 1010 J/m3, and its charge can range from 10−3 to 10−1 C. Witnesses often report seeing moving sparks about one millimeter in size inside the ball lightning shell. When the ball lightning shell ruptures, charge carriers fly out of it in the form of a sheaf of sparks. For many years, the press has published reports of the destruction of houses inside of which a ball lightning explosion had occurred. These events remained unexplained for a long time. This article, for the first time in the world, provides a physical explanation of these events. This article is based on the ball lightning model developed by the authors. According to this model, ball lightning consists of an ensemble of positively charged elements (dynamic electric capacitors) located inside a spherical shell of polarized water molecules. The dynamic capacitor is a system of cyclically moving electrons and ions. The expansion of this capacitor is restrained by the compression force of the ball lightning shell in the non-uniform electric field of the ball lightning core. The model allows us to find a physical explanation for most of the observed properties of ball lightning. Using the example of a simplified model of ball lightning (when the contribution of the kinetic energy of the dynamic capacitors was not taken into account), an analysis of the forces acting inside ball lightning was carried out. It was shown that when the shell of ball lightning is destroyed, the charges emitted from the core remain on the walls of the room or on loose objects for some time. The Coulomb force of the repulsion of charges turns out to be large enough to squeeze out the walls of a building or throw a heavy object or person out of the house.

1. Introduction

Ball lightning is an autonomous luminous formation moving in air, which usually appears during a thunderstorm [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30]. Ball lightnings have the shape of a sphere ranging in size from a centimeter to ten meters. They can exist from a few seconds to tens of minutes. They emit light—sometimes dim, sometimes bright. Their color may vary. They “float” in the air like balloons. The direction of their movement can be any, but often, once near the ground, they move at a certain height parallel to its surface. Sometimes they fly, carried away by the wind, but sometimes they are not carried away by the wind and even move towards the wind. If they collide with a person, they can shock him or her with an electric shock. Cases of animals being injured by electric currents created by ball lightning when striking the ground have also been described. Once in a container of water, ball lightning can heat the water to a boil. Based on the analysis of such cases, it was found that the energy density stored inside ball lightning can be about 1010 J/m3 [31]. Finding ball lightning close to the human body can lead to the heating of the blood and damage to the muscles [32]. Ball lightning can end its existence by quiet extinction, collapse or explosion. Before exploding, it emits a bright flash of light. In this case, ring-shaped metal objects can evaporate [14,33]. Once, having exploded near the ground, ball lightning left about 0.5 m3 of sintered soil granules [34]. Cases have been described when ball lightning moved for some time next to a flying aircraft, dug ditches in wet soil, or left behind deep holes. [35,36]. There are known cases when ball lightning lifted heavy objects into the air and carried them over dozens of meters [37]. The listed properties of ball lightning have been confirmed by numerous observations. The task of any model of ball lightning is to explain the entire set of these observations.
Let us trace the history of the emergence of hypotheses about the structure of ball lightning. The first stage of this process was to deny the existence of this phenomenon. This was justified, since the only “device” that recorded this phenomenon was the human eye. A person is an unreliable “tool”, since self-hypnosis is possible, the appearance of an afterimage on the retina after a bright flash, etc. Doubts were overcome when the first photographs of ball lightning were taken. The biggest surprise was the ability of ball lightning to “float” in the air. Therefore, it was natural to assume that it was constructed according to the principle of a balloon: a shell filled with hot gas, the levitation of which is ensured by the equality of the gravitational force and the Archimedean force [16]. Numerous shortcomings were immediately identified in this model: the inability of ball lightning to move in a vertical direction and against the wind, and to exhibit electrical effects. The main disadvantage of this model is the inability to explain the presence of a large energy reserve in ball lightning. It turned out that to explain the energy of ball lightning, it was necessary to assume that each gas molecule must have the energy of several keV (while the ionization energy of the molecules that make up the air does not exceed 10 eV). To explain this discrepancy, it was suggested that the energy source of ball lightning is nuclear reactions [38]. But in this case, ball lightning should be radiation hazardous. The literature describes only one case of the appearance of symptoms of radiation sickness in a group of people who were close to an exploding ball lightning [39]. In the overwhelming majority of cases (including those described in this article), people who suffered from a nearby explosion of ball lightning did not have radiation sickness. Despite this, the balloon model of ball lightning is still discussed in the literature [40], and antimatter [41] or miniature black holes [42] were proposed as keepers of its energy. In the mid-20th century, a number of hypotheses emerged in which ball lightning was considered an electrical discharge burning in air [43,44,45,46,47,48]. These models could describe the nature of ball lightning’s glow and some features of its movement. However, they had difficulty explaining the large energy reserve of ball lightning. To explain the effects of the release of high energy, some authors had to resort to the hypothesis of the existence of a certain channel in nature that constantly supplies ball lightning with energy. Attempts were made to find such a channel, but they were unsuccessful. Moreover, according to observations, ball lightning behaves like a material body. It can rotate, bounce off obstacles, and split into parts [1,2,3,7,8,9,11,13,14,15,17,18,19,20,21,22,24,26,28,29,30,49].
In 1859, de Tessan proposed a model of ball lightning in the form of a capacitor consisting of two spheres with a common center, charged with electricity of different signs [50]. The total charge of the system was considered equal to zero. The mutual attraction of the spheres should have been prevented by the pressure of the gas located between them. An assessment of the magnitude of the electric field energy accumulated in such a capacitor showed that it cannot be more than several joules [14]. The development of the de Tessa model was a proposal to compensate the force of the attraction of oppositely charged spheres by rotating the outer sphere [51,52,53]. However, in this case, the compensation of the attractive force of the shells by the centrifugal force occurs only in the equatorial part of the system. It is not clear what forces prevent the shells from approaching each other at the poles. In addition, it is clear that this system will tend to expand, since it lacks the force to hold the inner sphere in place. If there is a vacuum inside this system, then the expansion can be stopped by the force of atmospheric pressure acting on the outer sphere. According to the virial theorem, the energy density ρE inside the sphere is related to the external pressure P on the wall of the sphere by the relation ρE = 3P [5]. Substituting P = 105 N/m2 (atmospheric pressure), we obtain ρE = 3·105 J/m3, which is significantly less than the value ρE = 1010 J/m3 determined based on the Goodlet [31] calculations of ball lightning energy. Dijkhuis [54] suggested that electrons can become bound if brought close together. In this case, vortex tubes with a radius of 5.3·10−11 m formed from electrons. Positive ions rotate around the tubes in an orbit with a radius of 10−7 m. According to his model, ball lightning is an object of vortex tubes densely packed within the volume of the ball. The total charge of the system is zero. Geoffrey Endean [55] proposed a model of ball lightning in the form of a bubble with a plasma shell, inside which electromagnetic radiation circulates. Later, ball lightning with the same device was considered in article [56]. The reason for the long glow of ball lightning is explained by some researchers by the fact that this occurs due to chemical reactions on its surface. According to the Smirnov’s airgel model [16], ball lightning is a frame made of airgel threads. There are individual dots on it that glow due to heating in the oxidation reaction of organic matter. In the Abrahamson–Dinnis model [57], ball lightning glows due to the oxidation of silicon ejected from the soil by a linear lightning strike. The unusual property of ball lightning—the ability to freely pass through glass—has led to the proposal of theoretical models of electromagnetic field configurations with zero outward energy flow [58,59]. Such models are of purely theoretical interest and have no relation to real ball lightning, since, for example, in the Cameron [59] model it is assumed that the configuration of electromagnetic fields is of infinitely large size.
When starting work on our model of ball lightning, we took de Tessan’s idea as a basis and assumed that the element of its energetic core is a system that we called a “dynamic electric capacitor.” [60,61,62,63,64,65]. According to our assumption, this capacitor consists of electrons moving in a closed orbit and positive ions rotating around the location of the electrons. Such a system of moving charges is similar to the device of a hydrodynamic capacitor, studied in the work of [66]. The movement of electrons is controlled by the combined action of an electric field and a magnetic field generated by the movement of ions. Calculations have shown that to create a sufficiently strong magnetic field, the number of ions in this system must exceed the number of electrons, that is, the “dynamic capacitor” must be positively charged. Because of this and because of the “looseness” of the electron core, it tends to expand. The only way to prevent this expansion is to place it in a container that can withstand the pressure of a ball lightning core consisting of an ensemble of expanding capacitors. We set out to find the source of a centrally symmetrical spherical force, compressing the region within which there is a substance possessing kinetic energy with a density of 1010 J/m3. According to the virial theorem, the pressure on the core of ball lightning should be no less than 3.3·109 Pa, and a spherical container with radius R = 0.1 m should be compressed with a force F = 4·108 N. We assumed that the force compressing the core may appear due to the fact that the nucleus has an uncompensated electric charge Q. If a charge is placed inside a dielectric shell of thickness a, then due to the polarization of the shell molecules in the inhomogeneous field of the charge, a force will appear, the magnitude of which is proportional to the gradient of the electric field, that is, the magnitude of the charge Q. In contrast to this, the force of the Coulomb repulsion of charges acting on the shell is proportional to the square of the charge Q2. In the region from Q = 0 to Q = Qmax, Q > Q2. Estimates have shown that for the typical sizes of ball lightning from 10 to 100 cm, the equality of the forces compressing and stretching the shell occurs in the range of the charge values of Q = 10−3–10−1 C and the thickness of the shell consisting of water molecules, a = 1–10 cm. This method of solving the problem at first glance seems paradoxical: in addition to the requirement of compensating for the force caused by the movement of the molecules, we also added the need to create a force that prevents the Coulomb repulsion of the charges. It turned out that part of the thickness of the shell is “responsible” for compensating the force created by movement of the molecules, and part of it is for compensating the force of the repulsion of the charges. In fact, it turned out that we returned to the idea of de Tessan’s electric capacitor, but in a new form. Our ball lightning is one of the electrodes of a large capacitor, the second electrode of which is the ground. The breakdown of this capacitor is prevented by the dielectric shell and a layer of air. The configuration we proposed was supported and successfully developed by the authors of some models of ball lightning [30,67,68,69,70]. The idea that ball lightning is a unipolarly charged object has made it possible to find answers for many “strange” features of ball lightning behavior. It turned out that the complex nature of ball lightning movement is explained by the interaction of its charge with the electric fields of the atmosphere. When in close contact with conductors, ball lightning changes the properties of a nearby medium due to the process of draining its charge [71].
The presence of a charge in ball lightning is a fact confirmed by observations and does not require additional proof. The purpose of this article is to show how this property of ball lightning allows us to find an explanation for many actions of ball lightning, which remained a mystery for many years and even gave reason to attribute them to phenomena that contradict the “laws of science” [14]. In this article, we consider only the destruction caused by the action of the ball lightning charge (that is, the energy of the electric field of the capacitor), and we do not take into account the additional effect of the kinetic energy of the nucleus. The basic idea of our article is the assumption that ball lightning is an ensemble of charge carriers of the same sign, collected inside a dielectric shell. If the shell is intact, they are located in a small area of space. When the shell ruptures, for example, due to mechanical damage, they scatter in all directions. Figure 1 shows an example of such an event that occurred when ball lightning collided with a car. It can be seen that fragments of the ball lightning core, flying out of the shell, take the form of a rapidly expanding luminous ball. It is natural to assume that this can be explained by the fact that the fragments have an electric charge of the same sign. If a ball lightning explosion occurred inside a region of space bounded by walls, then the scattered charges would remain on the walls for some time, trying to push them apart. The results of this action of charges can be found in the following descriptions of events that occurred during the explosion of ball lightning inside closed rooms.

2. Cases of Ball Lightning Explosions inside Enclosed Spaces

The literature describes many cases of indoor ball lightning explosions. As a rule, the result of an explosion is a bang, accompanied by a wave of air, melting electrical wires and the appearance of burn marks on painted floors [19,21,24,26]. However, in the history of ball lightning observations, there were several cases when its explosion indoors led to great destruction. These cases are very rare. In his book, Brand [3] spoke of a ball lightning explosion in the village Poggio-Tre-Crossi in 1914, which led to the destruction of the local church. Six similar cases are described in books [14,30,72]. The rarity of these cases is somewhat supported by the fact that, according to a review by Keul [73], such an event has never been witnessed by qualified scientists in their lifetime. This state of affairs is apparently explained by the fact that in nature there are two types of ball lightning: with a large and a small supply of energy. This is confirmed, for example, by the conclusion of Stakhanov [21] about the existence of two types of ball lightning—short-lived and long-lived. The same opinion is shared by Rakov and Uman [74], who believe that there may be several types of ball lightning and several ways of generating it in nature. In our article [75], we suggested that two types of ball lightning that differ in the activity of its energy core can exist. Ball lightning with a low energy reserve has a core of slow-moving charge carriers (possibly ions), and the core of ball lightning with high energy consists of dynamic electrical capacitors—objects that can contain high energy. In our opinion, these two types of ball lightning should differ in color. The reason for the glow of low-energy ball lightning is a corona discharge on its surface, which supports the emission of excited NO2 molecules in the violet part of the spectrum. In high-energy ball lightning, the glow generated by the movement of the elements of its core is added to the glow of the shell, so the total spectrum shifts to the red region. The assumption that different types of ball lightning exist in nature is supported by the dependence of the lifetime of ball lightning on its size, discovered by Bychkov et al. [76,77]. It turned out that large ball lightning lives longer than small ball lightning. This can be explained by the fact that the energy spent on the formation of the former is much greater than the latter.
After this short introduction, we will discuss the results of events that occurred during high-energy ball lightning explosions inside confined spaces.
On the afternoon of 27 May 2013, in the Buryat village Mogsokhon, in Russia “nothing foreshadowed a tragedy. At 15 o’clock, the usual rain began, but suddenly thunder of such force struck that people ducked to the ground in fright and ran in different directions. The minute after, a luminous ball descended from the sky and entered the house of Bayan Sandanov’s family through the roof. A deafening explosion thundered in the house. At the time of the explosion, the house was attended by the hostess, Rada Sandanova, who was cleaning the kitchen after lunch. She found herself under the rubble of a wall and received a serious concussion, partially losing her hearing. The victim was admitted to the hospital, now her health has recovered” [78]. The explosion of ball lightning caused the wall of a log house to fall out, windows and doors were squeezed out, and slate sheets were torn off and scattered on the roof of the house (Figure 2 and Figure 3). The energy of the explosion of this ball lightning, estimated by the similar action of a TNT charge, turned out to be equal to 30–130 MJ [79].
The same type of destruction is shown in Figure 4. The result of a ball lightning explosion inside the house of Igor Taryashinov can be seen in it. The explosion took place on 28 July 2021 in the village of Kyren in the Tunken region in Buryatia. The explosion knocked out part of a log wall, knocked out windows and damaged furniture in the house. It should be noted that the fact that the destruction of the house, caused by an explosion of ball lightning, does not look like a break and collapse, as occurs with the explosions of condensed substances. It is more like a slow “dismantling” of the structure of the house.
The sad history of accidental explosions of solids (for example, saltpeter) or air-gas mixtures tells us that these explosions are always accompanied by numerous human casualties [80]. In our case the most surprising thing was that the mistress of the house, who was next to the ball lightning at the time of the explosion, was injured, but remained alive. In Figure 5 Rada Sandanova is shown in July 2013 (two months after the event).
On 9 December 1956, in the city of Maykop, Russia, during a severe thunderstorm, three ball lightnings were formed. One of them entered a house through a radio transmission line, burned electrical wiring, smashed the power meter and exploded into two fireballs. The explosion lifted the ceiling and pushed the walls of the house apart. Then, one of the balls broke through the wall of the house and flew out into a courtyard [14]. On 24 July 1967, “a bright white ball lightning about 20 cm in diameter flew into a country house. There was a sharp and powerful explosion, and a bright flash was visible at a distance of hundreds of meters.
The audibility in transistor receivers fell sharply. A brick wall, a brick oven and a wardrobe were destroyed in the house. The log walls were “kicked out”, and the window frames were also knocked out” [72]. “On 12 March 2008, in the village of Sinitichi, in the Kamenets district of the Brest region of Belarus, at about 19:40, a blinding flash of light was observed, accompanied by a roar. In the village, in an instant, all the TVs turned on and burned out, the lights went out, the phones went silent, and windows flew out in one of the houses. The house, where 42-year-old Vyacheslav Kislyak lived, was in the midst of a terrible destructive force. Something of enormous power exploded in one of the rooms of his house. One of the walls of the solid wooden house was completely blown out by the shock wave, the window frames flew out a dozen meters, and the roof with the miraculously survived slate folded in half. The owner of the house, at the moment when half of the house was blown to pieces, was lying on a bed near the wall opposite the one that had been blown out by the blast wave. The lucky one got off with a few scratches on his face. According to Oleg Boyko, the head of the fire emergency and rescue post, a ball lightning that flew into the house could have been the culprit of such a powerful explosion. All the wiring in the house burned out, as if the voltage in the wires had jumped to a monstrous size. Oleg Boyko believes that ball lightning flew into the house through the chimney. There was no thunderstorm that evening, but it was drizzling lightly” [81].
In the summer of 1938, in the Vologda Oblast, Russia, “an orange ball the size of a soccer ball flew into the smithy. At a quarter of its radius, it was covered with a translucent shell of a dark-blue-blue color, which shimmered, streamed and rotated with the ball above the forge for a minute. Then, the ball from the forge moved to the opposite wall. There was a crack of wood, and the whole wall fell flat to the ground. The strong smell of sulfur had appeared in the room” [26]. Note that during this action of ball lightning, the witness was inside the smithy, and he remained alive.
We find a vivid description of the action of ball lightning in the book by Imianitov and Tikhiy [14]. “This incident took place in August 1924 in the village of Gvozdki, in the Valdai District of the Novgorod Region of Russia. At about two o’clock in the afternoon, a heavy pouring rain began with gusts of squally wind. There were two people in the Savushkins’ house: the eldest daughter Anna, 23–25 years old, and the youngest son Alyoshka, 8–10 years old. Alyoshka sat down on the bench and began to look out the window. On the top of the Russian stove was a dough tub covered with a clean homespun tablecloth. Suddenly, in the entryway, Anna fell to the floor from a strong crash and shaking of the entire building. As she fell, she heard the crackle of a wood splitting in the garret. Having regained consciousness, she first threw herself into the hut. Running into the hut, she saw that the windows were without frames, and Alyoshka was not at home. Frightened, she ran to the window, and couldn’t believe her eyes: Alyoshka was sitting in the garden by the fence beyond the road. There were three frames lying next to them and there was the dough tub, as if it had been placed there. Shouting in fright: “Alyoshka, how did you end up there?!”, she ran out of the hut. Anna well remembered that, going out into the entrance, she left Alyoshka sitting on the bench, and the windows were closed. The neighbor, Uncle Misha said that he saw something incredible. Two lightning bolts simultaneously flashed over the ridge of the Savushkins’ roof, and a bright blue ball the size of a fist separated from them. The ball jumped into the chimney pipe after the flash. Having passed the straight chimney, it hit the stone slab of the top of the stove, on which there was the dough tub, and exploded. From the explosion, all the frames, the dough tub and the boy Alyoshka flew into the street. The blast wave carried them across the road through the first fence to the second fence of the garden. The frames were lying on the ground with partially broken glass. Alyoshka fell, but did not hurt himself, then sat down by the fence. This is how Anna saw him from the window. The upright dough tub stood next to the frame, but there was no tablecloth on it”.

3. Analysis of the Action of Ball Lightning Explosion Indoors

According to observations, ball lightning consists of a luminous spherical core, surrounded by a shell (Figure 6) [75]. The ball lightning model is easier to understand by considering the structure of multiply charged clusters—miniature ball lightning (Figure 7) [82,83]. The cluster is considered as a sphere filled with ions of the same sign, which is compressed by a shell of polarized water molecules. Clusters are formed during electrical discharges in water [84,85]. The size of such clusters is about 10 μm. We believe that ball lightning is “built” according to the same scheme as a multiply charged cluster. The only differences between these systems: the size of the average ball lightning is 104 times larger than the size of the cluster, and inside the shell of the ball lightning there are not just ions, but unipolar charged elements formed from electrons and ions rotating in closed orbits. Most likely, it is these elements (which we call dynamic electric capacitors) that witnesses of ball lightning see when they talk about sparks moving inside the shell [21,26]. The dynamic electrical capacitors are carriers of kinetic energy and of electrical charge. Therefore, they “press” on the shell with a force that is greater than the force that stretches the shell due to the Coulomb repulsion of the stationary ions’ charges. To keep things simple, let us assume that, as in a cluster, the expansion of the shell of ball lightning occurs only due to Coulomb repulsion of charges. Using the scheme for calculating the structure of clusters, let us consider a sphere with a radius R = 10 cm, inside which there are ions with a total charge Q = 10−2 C. This charge will create, on the surface of the sphere, a field with intensity
EQ = Q/4πε0R2 = 9·1011 V/m.
Here ε0 = 8.854·10−12 F/m is a dielectric constant. Due to the Coulomb repulsion, the ions will stretch the sphere with a force
FQ = Q2/8πε0R2 = 4.496·107 N.
Let us place one water molecule, which we will consider as a ball with a diameter dw = 4·10−10 m, on the surface of the sphere. The dipole moment of the water molecule is pw = 6.327·10−30 C/m. The striving of a water molecule to orient its dipole moment in the direction of the electric field vector is hindered by the thermal movement of the molecules. In order for the direction of this dipole to be oriented along the electric field vector EQ, the Langevin condition EQ > Emin = 3kBT/pw = 2·109 V/m must be satisfied [86]. As one can see, this condition is met, which means that all water molecules on the sphere’s surface will be completely polarized. The water molecule is attracted to the center of the sphere by the force
Faw = pwQ grad EQ = pwQ/2πε0R3 = 1.138·10−18 N.
On the surface of the sphere S = 4πR2 with radius R = 0.1 m, nw = S/dw2 = 7.85·1017, water molecules can fit, and the compression force of the sphere by the monolayer of water molecules becomes equal to F1w = Faw·nw = 0.893 N. Water molecules located on the surface of the sphere will tend to push out their “neighbors”, this will result in a weakening of the force attracting them to the center of the electric charge. In the work [82], this force was calculated for micron-sized clusters. It was shown that the force of water molecules pushing out of a shell of radius R is described by the formula
Fr = 2.69·109 (RR0)−1.3 (N),
where R is measured in angstroms (10−10 m), and R0 = −4.5. According to this formula, the force Fr turns out to be noticeable at values of R~10−9–10−8 m; at the values of R~10−1 m it can be neglected. The force F1w = 0.893 N is 5·107 times less than the force FQ with which the ions stretch the surface of the sphere. The values of the forces that stretch and compress the sphere can be equalized if the number of the layers of the water molecules is increased by 5·107 times, that is, the shell thickness is increased to a = dw × 5·107 = 2 cm. As a result, we get an object with an inner sphere radius R = 10 cm and shell thickness a = 2 cm, which can hold a charge of Q = 10−2 C inside itself. Charge carriers (ions in multiply charged clusters or dynamic capacitors in large ball lightning) will try to penetrate outward through the shell due to the action of the electric field of the core. Sooner or later, they will be able to do this, so the lifetime of any ball lightning is limited. But if in a cluster with its thin shell and small ion size this can happen quite quickly (in a few seconds), then the large size of the dynamic capacitor (1 mm) and the large thickness of the ball lightning shell (1–10 cm) give it a chance to extend the drainage time of the charge up to dozens of minutes.
In the water molecule, the distance dh between the oxygen atom and the plane in which the hydrogen atoms are arranged is 0.588·10−10 m. Thus, the molecule can be considered as a dipole of length dh, at the ends of which there are charges qd = pw/dh = 10−19 C. The distance between water molecules in ice crystal is about 3·10−10 m. Therefore, ns = 1019 water molecules can be placed on an area 1 m2. The total charge of the ends of the dipoles over an area 1 m2 is σ = qd·ns = 1 C/m2. In calculations, it is convenient to use the idea of a water shell consisting of dipoles, the length of which is equal to the thickness of the shell a, and the charge density on surface of the sphere is σ = 1 C/m2. With this representation, the force Fsh compressing the shell is equal to
Fsh = σa·4πR2·grad E = 2σaQ0R.
Equating Fsh and FQ (Formula (2)), we find
Q = 16πσaR.
Let us try to find an explanation for the described events. In the case of the ball lightning explosion in the smithy, its size (diameter 2Rbl = 20 cm) and shell thickness (a = ¼ Rbl = 2.5 cm) are indicated. Knowing these dimensions, we can find that the charge of this ball lightning was Qbl = 9.42·10−2 C. Suppose that when the ball lightning had exploded in the smithy, its charge was evenly distributed over the surface of the walls, ceiling and floor of the room. Let us consider this room as a cube with an edge side Lr = 4 m. For a sphere with a radius Rsp = 2 m, the force with which the charge Qbl pushes the surface,
Fsp = Qbl2/8πε0Rsp2 = 9.974∙106 N.
The pressure on the surface of the sphere is
Psp = Fsp/4πRsp2 = 1.98·105 N/m2.
Let Psp be the pressure be exerted on the smithy’s wall with a surface area Sr = 4 m × 4 m = 16 m2. Hence the force pressing on the smithy’s wall is Fr = Psp × Lr2 = 3.17∙106 N = 324 t. When this force appears, the log wall of the room will begin to move. Let us determine the time during which the wall acquires the velocity of v = 1 m/s. Let the thickness of the wall be equal to b = 20 cm. The volume of the wall is Vw = Lw2·b = 3.2 m3. Let us take the specific weight of wood to be equal to ρw = 0.8·103 kg/m3, from here we find the mass of the wall Mw = Vw·ρw = 2.56·103 kg. Under the action of force Fr, the wall will begin to move with acceleration a = Fr/Mw and acquire a velocity v = 1 m/s after a time t = v/a = v·Mw/Fr = 8·10−4 s. Thus, in order for the wall to accelerate to a velocity of v = 1 m/s, it must hold a charge Qbl/6 = 1.6·10−2 C for a time greater than 10−3 s. The charge of the exploding ball lightning hits the inner surface of the room wall. In order to drain to the ground, it must move to the outer surface of the wall. The time of this transition is determined by the electrical resistance of the logs of the house. The walls of a room with an area of 4 × 4 m2 with a ceiling height 4 m represent a capacitor, the capacity of which is close to the capacity of a spherical capacitor with a radius r = 2 m: C = 4πε0r = 2.22·10−10 F. In order for the time τ of the charge to remain on the wall for about one second, the resistance to charge movement through the wall should be no less than R = τ/C = 4.5·109 Ohm. The values of the volumetric electrical resistance of natural dielectric materials (shellac, rosin) lie in the range ρ = 1013–1014 Ohm·m [87]. It is quite possible to obtain the required value ρ = 2.25·1010 Ohm·m for a dry log 0.2 m thick. The further fate of the charges passing onto the outer surface of the wall does not matter. They can slowly drain due to the conductivity of the air or go into the ground through some kind of conductor.
Let us try to understand the event that took place in the village Gvozdki [14]. Let us assume that the top of the stove was 1 m higher than the floor level and it was at a distance 3 m from the window (Figure 8). Let the height of the windowsill be 1 m, and the vertical size of the window 1.5 m. Let us assume that the ball lightning exploded in the corner between the top of the stove and the wall of the oven, 0.5 m away from the dough tub. Being flown out the window, the dough tub flew horizontally 3 m to the first fence of the garden and an additional 11 m of the width road and its shoulders, 14 m in all. In order for the dough tub to fly out of the window, it had to fly at an angle α, the tangent of which is not more than tan α = 1.2 m/3 m = 0.4 (α = 21.80). At the moment of departure from the window, the dough tub was at a height of h0 = 2.2 m, and the ratio of the vertical and horizontal components of its velocity was also tan α: vver/vhor = 0.4. It flew a distance of l = 14 m in time t = l/vhor. During the time t1, it rose to a height h1 above level h0, and then, during time t2, fell from this height to the ground. Height h1 = g·t12/2. The component of the kinetic energy of the dough tub of mass m, associated with the vertical component of its velocity, Wk = mvver2/2, is equal to the potential energy at the highest point of the rise above the level h0, Wp = mgh1. Hence, h1 = vver2/2g = (0.4)2 ·vhor2/2g = (0.08·vhor2)/g. The ascent time to height h0 + h1 is equal to t1 = 0.4·vhor/g. The time the tub falls from this height is
t2 = [2(h0 + h1)/g]1/2.
The full flight time of the dough tub is
t = t1 + t2 = 0.4·vhor/g + [2(h0 + h1)/g]1/2.
During this time, the dough tub horizontally flew from the window to the landing site over the distance of
l = 0.4·(vhor)2/g + vhor·[2 (h0 + h1)/g]1/2
Substituting l = 14 m, h1 = 0.08·(vhor)2/g and h0 = 2.2 m into this equation and solving it, we find vhor = 11 m/s.
Suppose that the dough tub has acquired a speed v = vhor/cos α = 12 m/s, repelling from the charge Qbl, which was transferred by the ball lightning to the furnace wall. Suppose that the charge of the ball lightning was equal to 5·10−3 C. Let us assume that the charge carriers during the explosion of the ball lightning scattered uniformly in all directions. On the unit surface of a sphere with a radius R0 = 0.5 m (the distance between the ball lightning and the dough tub), there was a part of the charge σs = Qbl/4πR02 = 1.6·10−3 C/m2. The charge qtb = σs·Stb = 9.6·10−5 C, which is about 2% of the charge of ball lightning. This charge could fall on the area Stb = 0.06 m2 of the dough tub section. Let us assume that the dough tub received a charge q = 2.4·10−5 C. The work of the force of charge repulsion is
A = (Qq/4πε0) ∙ (1/R0–1/R).
Here R0 = 0.5 m is the initial distance between the tub and the ball lightning, and R = 3 m is the distance between the oven and the window. Substituting in (10) numerical values, we find A = 1800 J. This is equal to the kinetic energy of an object with a mass of 25 kg, flying at a speed 12 m/s. It can be assumed that approximately the same forces acted on a boy with a mass of about 15 kg. The splitting of the wooden garret and the breaking of the windows occurred due to the repulsion of the charges deposited on them during the explosion of the ball lightning.

4. Conclusions

Over hundreds of years of ball lightning observation, a several dozen cases have been recorded that still seem incredible. There are reports of ball lightning cutting furrows in the bark of trees, lifting people up, and even once dragging a freight train with its locomotive turned off for an hour [37]. About once a year there are reports of ball lightning explosions inside village houses. When the first report of a ball lightning explosion inside an adobe house appeared in the press in 1965 [88,89], the leading scientists involved in the study of ball lightning declared it a hoax [14]. However, new reports of such events continued to arrive, but no serious scientist offered an explanation for the physics of these phenomena. Our work can be considered the first attempt to provide a scientific explanation for these events. On the basis of the above, we can conclude that the effect of a ball lightning explosion inside a room has specific features that distinguish it from the effect of an explosion of domestic gas or condensed explosives. In the latter case, the destruction is caused by the action of a shock wave, which has a stronger effect on the walls of a building and on the people in it. We can say that the action of ball lightning turns out to be “gentler”. Judging by the effect of the explosion on the slate sheets on the roof (Figure 2), it can be assumed that these sheets were torn out together with the nails by the force emanating from the room, and that this force was applied evenly to the entire sheet, and not to its part. In the village of Gvozdki, the explosion of a ball lightning had smoothly transported a dough tub over 14 m without spilling the dough. This means that the acceleration of the motion of the tub was not very large. Indeed, the force of repulsion of a ball lightning charge (Qbl = 5·10−3 C) from a charge that hits the tub (qtb = 2.4·10−5 C) at a distance of 1 m between them is equal to F1 = 1200 N. With the mass of the tub mtb = 25 kg acceleration a = F1/mtb = 48 m/s2 = 4.9 g.
The effect of the explosion of ball lightning is plausibly explained by the electrodynamical model [60,61,62,63,64,65]. According to this model, the electric charge of ball lightning is held by the compression of the shell of the ball lightning. When the shell is destroyed, this charge is distributed for about one second along the inner surface of the walls of the room and exerts pressure on them. If the charged items are loose, they can be thrown out to a large distance. Until ball lightning is created in the laboratory, the only way to test its model is to compare the results of its effect on the environment with the results of calculations. The analysis of the observed characteristics of ball lightning, carried out on the basis of our model, allows us to explain the reason for the large specific energy reserve of ball lightning, the nature of its movement at high altitudes and near the ground, the reason for electric shock to people, the mechanism of the rotation of ball lightning and its rebound from obstacles, the reasons for the instantaneous evaporation ring metal objects, the processes of hole formation in glass and the passage of ball lightning through small holes [32,49,63,64,65,71]. In [63,65] the design of an installation for its reproduction in the laboratory was proposed.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization: A.I.N., A.M.V. and T.F.N.; Methodology: A.I.N., V.A.N. and A.M.V.; Validation: A.I.N., V.A.N., A.M.V. and T.F.N.; Investigation: A.I.N., V.A.N., A.M.V. and T.F.N.; Writing—original draft preparation; A.I.N., T.F.N. and A.M.V.; Writing—review and editing: A.I.N., V.A.N., A.M.V. and T.F.N. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are openly available in the published literature.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Collision of a ball lightning with a car (filmed by a car DVR). (a) The car is approaching the ball lightning. (b) The moment of collision. (c) The scattering of the fragments of the ball lightning (http://rutube.ru/tracks/678746.htmail, accessed on 26 June 2018).
Figure 1. Collision of a ball lightning with a car (filmed by a car DVR). (a) The car is approaching the ball lightning. (b) The moment of collision. (c) The scattering of the fragments of the ball lightning (http://rutube.ru/tracks/678746.htmail, accessed on 26 June 2018).
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Figure 2. A house destroyed by ball lightning [79].
Figure 2. A house destroyed by ball lightning [79].
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Figure 3. A wall knocked out by an explosion of ball lightning [79].
Figure 3. A wall knocked out by an explosion of ball lightning [79].
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Figure 4. A wall of the house that was pushed out by an explosion of ball lightning (https://static.mk.ru/upload/entities/2021/07/28/17/articlesImages/image/cb/6b/54/b0/fdd2dd02aeeb483cc7a2d48f8fe59e4a.jpg, accessed on 29 July 2021).
Figure 4. A wall of the house that was pushed out by an explosion of ball lightning (https://static.mk.ru/upload/entities/2021/07/28/17/articlesImages/image/cb/6b/54/b0/fdd2dd02aeeb483cc7a2d48f8fe59e4a.jpg, accessed on 29 July 2021).
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Figure 5. Rada Sandanova on 29 July 2013 in the “Good Morning” program of the 1st channel of Russian television talks about the encounter with ball lightning.
Figure 5. Rada Sandanova on 29 July 2013 in the “Good Morning” program of the 1st channel of Russian television talks about the encounter with ball lightning.
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Figure 6. Ball lightning shot near Blagoveshchensk, Russia [75].
Figure 6. Ball lightning shot near Blagoveshchensk, Russia [75].
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Figure 7. Structure of the multiple charged cluster [82,83].
Figure 7. Structure of the multiple charged cluster [82,83].
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Figure 8. The diagram of the flight of the dough tub caused by the explosion of ball lightning in the village of Gvozdki.
Figure 8. The diagram of the flight of the dough tub caused by the explosion of ball lightning in the village of Gvozdki.
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Nikitin, A.I.; Nikitin, V.A.; Velichko, A.M.; Nikitina, T.F. Explosions of Ball Lightning inside Enclosed Spaces. Atmosphere 2024, 15, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15010002

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Nikitin AI, Nikitin VA, Velichko AM, Nikitina TF. Explosions of Ball Lightning inside Enclosed Spaces. Atmosphere. 2024; 15(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15010002

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Nikitin, Anatoly I., Vadim A. Nikitin, Alexander M. Velichko, and Tamara F. Nikitina. 2024. "Explosions of Ball Lightning inside Enclosed Spaces" Atmosphere 15, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15010002

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Nikitin, A. I., Nikitin, V. A., Velichko, A. M., & Nikitina, T. F. (2024). Explosions of Ball Lightning inside Enclosed Spaces. Atmosphere, 15(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15010002

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