Lightning and It's Impact
How does lightning form?
Click Here for Lightning Damage Reports
Lightning, a flow of electrical current between the earth and storm clouds,
occurs as varying charges of positive and negative polarity build up in
the atmosphere during a storm. The result is a discharge or current sent
rushing toward the earth. As this downward force nears the earth's surface,
positive charges rise up to meet it. As the negatively charged stepped
leader thrusts toward the ground readying to discharge its energy, its
path is erratic. Nearing the earth, positive charges are attracted by
it and strain up from roof edges, chimneys, roof HNAC equipment, lighting
poles, antennas, etc. When the two opposing charge systems meet, they
create a closed circuit. As the path to the ground is completed, a flash
is created.
What happens when a structure is struck by lightning?
A lightning strike to an unprotected structure can be catastrophic.
Packing up to 100 million volts of electricity and a force comparable
to that of a small nuclear reactor, lightning has the power to rip through
roofs, explode walls of brick and concrete and ignite deadly fires. In
addition to structural damage, lightning effects are not just limited
to the physical structures they hit. Inside, organizations experience
the following financial, safety and operational impacts from direct lightning
strikes
- Poor customer satisfaction
resulting from phone and computer outages
- Lost paid wages to idle, interrupted staff
- Lost revenues each hour of broadcast and communications downtime
- Lost revenues and poor service records from utility power outages
- Costly property damage, draining capital and/or jeopardizing insurance
coverage
- Most Important Risk of injury or loss of life
- Failure of mission critical systems from damaged sensitive electronics
- Costly supply chain disruptions from downed and damaged automation systems
|
|