beluluk said:
When i was learning electronic stuff on the site, i found this... perhaps somebody could help the webmaster.
http://www.williamson-labs.com/lightning-motion.htm
Sounds like a capacitor phenomenon, as well as a "plasma contactor" phenomenon. Plasma contactors are active devices which provide an ion-cloud next to a metal electrode. Sort of like a carbon brush commutator, but making connection between a metal surface and some empty space. The following is speculative, but it probably could be tested by simulating the setup in miniature by using a big tabletop vandegraaff machine, and models of the whip antenna, air blast from fast driving, etc.
Thunder storms are usually negative near the Earth (w/lightning strikes lowering some negative charge,) so a vertical conductor will tend to spew out a positive ion cloud from any sharp tips. Imagine that the whip antenna is emitting smoke. Positive-charged smoke. Regardless of the little ball on top, a vertical whip antenna could easily develop a glow-discharge near its tip during a t-storm. Whenever the vertical e-field is strong enough, then the air at the antenna tip will break down. The radius of the little ball is too "sharp," and isn't large enough to stop the breakdown.
But if the antenna develops a plume of positive ions just above the tip, that ion cloud provides a bit of DC electrical shielding if there is little wind sweeping the ions away. In other words, positive ions just above the antenna will attract negative electrons to the tip, and greatly reduce the e-field at the antenna tip. This provides the overall ion current with negative-feedback current limiting mechanism, since the more ions spewed out, the lower the e-field at the metal surface, causing less ions to be spewed out. (All this stuff is a hot topic in the long-running argument over whether lighting rods should be made with sharp points, versus large "umbrellas" or spheres.)
But *wind* will greatly alter all of these effects. If you have a high-voltage needle spewing out a corona discharge, and you direct an air-blast at the needle tip, the value of ion current rises. So with the whip antenna, the faster you drive, the higher grows the value of DC microamps out the antenna tip, and the longer grows the high-density part of the ion-plume downstream from the antenna.
What would occur during a nearby lightning strike? In the small time domains leading to sparks, the lightning causes the vertical environmental e-field to suddenly drop to a lower value. This might allow the antenna's ion plume to suddenly move towards the antenna (attempting to cancel itself with the image charge there.) Moving a positive charge towards a conductor always places a net positive charge on the further parts of the conductor (while simultaneously inducing an image-charge of more negatives near the location of the approaching positive charge.) In other words, if the positive ion plume suddenly moves towards the antenna, the other end of the antenna becomes strongly positive net-charged *even before* the ions touch the metal. Therefore a lightning strike would leave an antenna with a near-instant (and perhaps quite large) positive voltage.
This effect should become smaller when wind speed was lower.
Engineering description: A non-grounded antenna near a t-storm always acts like a capacitive voltage divider, with one capacitor being between antenna and Earth's surface, and the other appearing between antenna and the negative charge of the storm. Sudden changes in the storm's voltage will appear on the antenna as much smaller changes, but in the same direction of polarity. An extensive ion cloud would make the antenna's signal much larger. An ion cloud would behave like a large metal object floating near the antenna. The previous value of antenna/stormcloud capacitance will be small when compared to the value of antenna-ioncloud capacitance in series with ioncloud-stormcloud capacitance. It's almost as if we've attached a big metal sheet to the top of the antenna ...a capactively-coupled metal sheet.