Do Plasma Phenomena Indicate Imminent Earthquakes?

  • Thread starter Thread starter PhysicsFan11
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Plasma
AI Thread Summary
Reports of unusual atmospheric phenomena, referred to as Earthquake Lights, have been linked to severe earthquakes, with witnesses describing various plasma-like displays before seismic events. The phenomenon is not widely accepted in geophysics, with explanations often attributing it to the piezoelectric effect caused by stress along fault lines. While anecdotal evidence exists, credible scientific literature on the topic is limited, and many visual phenomena can be explained by natural occurrences, such as ice cloud halos. Some studies have documented atmospheric disturbances associated with earthquakes, but the lack of robust research on Earthquake Lights raises skepticism about their validity. Reliable sources and scientific papers are recommended for further exploration of this topic, rather than anecdotal videos or speculative discussions.
PhysicsFan11
Messages
35
Reaction score
1
I have been intrigued by reports over the years from witnesses who claimed (at various sites) that before a particularly severe earthquake, that unusual atmospheric phenomenon that would seem to be best described as various forms of plasma (super heated gas) were seen. Is this something accepted in geophysics and what would it indicate? Perhaps cracks in the Earth allowing superheated gases to be released as the 'friction' zone of an earthquake reaches its peak?
 
Earth sciences news on Phys.org
Can you cite anything about it? Most of the materials I can find are on Washington Post blog and National Geographic. As far as I looked, the relevant term is Earthquake Light. It seems to be vague and most of the explanations that are not (as aptly described in National Geographic article) 'UFO fodder' revolve around piezoelectric effect caused by a stress along the prospective earthquake zone.
 
DevacDave said:
Can you cite anything about it?
These have been anecdotal but over multiple times and sites. Here is but one link to clouds (fascinating) that were seen before an earthquake in China.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=82eoaoOkyAA
 
Here is yet another, this time before a Canadian earthquake.
 
Don't get me wrong, I'm just as curious as you are but could not find anything reputable almost instantly. It's usually a bad sign, so I would like to hear geophysicist say a few words on the topic.

EDIT: This got sent unintentionally, I wasn't finished writing. Here's the rest:

However, as noted in the rules it's not really a place for speculative talks etc. I was hoping to at least bring few clarifying terms and definitions. Videos are really nice, but without some additional data they can't be really assumed as a solid proof/material on its own. I would look around the term Earthquake Lights or similar, but there is nothing about it on Arxiv… usually a really bad sign for any theory.
 
Last edited:
PhysicsFan11 said:
Here is yet another, this time before a Canadian earthquake.

Sorry to burst your bubble but that is a common ice cloud rainbow. Nothing to do with earthquakes. Feel free to Google the term.
 
  • Like
Likes artyb and DevacDave
DaveC426913 said:
Sorry to burst your bubble but that is a common ice cloud rainbow. Nothing to do with earthquakes. Feel free to Google the term.

To clarify, it's part of the ice cloud halos, on the same side of the sun, opposite side to a rainbow.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halo_(optical_phenomenon)
 
artyb said:
To clarify, it's part of the ice cloud halos, on the same side of the sun, opposite side to a rainbow.
Yup. When But ice cloud halo tends to turn up halos in Google that are more-or-less fully circular, looking little like the OP's example.
 
  • #10
  • Like
Likes davenn

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
7K
Replies
8
Views
5K
Replies
1
Views
4K
Replies
5
Views
3K
Replies
5
Views
3K
Replies
11
Views
27K
Back
Top