Has the mystery of glowing Norwegian orbs been solved? Expert claims natural 'battery' creates the amazing light show
Hessdalen lights can be as large as cars and have been spotted in Oslo
Numerous theories have attempted to explain how they are created
One claims metallic rocks divided by a sulphurous river provide a natural 'battery' which provides the right conditions for orbs
Italian expert used samples from the site to make a battery to test this idea
He thinks bubbles of ionised gas are made when sulphurous fumes from the River Hesja react with humid air, forming the balls of light
But other experts think they're a type of ball lightning or made from plasma
By
Sarah Griffiths
The presence of strange balls of light hovering over a
valley in central Norway has baffled scientists for years.
Known as the Hessdalen Phenomenon, the flashing orbs can be
as large as cars and have even attracted attention from ufologists.
But now scientists think the unusual lights could be formed
by a natural ‘battery’ buried deep underground, created by metallic minerals
reacting with a sulphurous river running through it.
If the theory is proven correct, it could open up a new way
of storing energy.
Some of the lights drift gently through the sky for up to
two hours, while others flash white or blue and streak through the valley,
disappearing in seconds, New Scientist reported.
A computer engineer called Erling Strand from Ostfold University
in Norway, has been looking for the physics behind the natural phenomenon since
1982, when frequent light shows captured the attention of the press and
scientists alike.
He set up Project Hessdalen in a bid to unite experts trying
to unravel the mystery of how the mysterious orbs are formed, and was able to
quickly rule out theories that the lights came from planes, vehicles or
buildings.
The researchers noticed a small fluctuation in the areas’
magnetic field before the formation of the lights, but when they measured
radioactivity and seismic activity – both of which could cause such a
phenomenon – there was nothing unusual at the site 248miles (400km) north of
Oslo.
An international team of experts then measured the size,
shape and speed of the orbs using radar and spectral analysis to examine the
elements that make up the light.
Fully charged: One expert has studied the Hessdalen site
since 1996 and has found that rocks in the valley are rich in zinc and iron on
one side of the river running through it, and rich in copper on the other side.
The sulphurous water in the river creates a giant battery
They revealed that the lights make no sound, appear to be
cool and do not leave any scorch marks on the ground, unlike ball lightning.
They do however sterilise an area upon contact, killing the soil microbes.
Jader Monari of the Institute of Radio Astronomy in
Medicina, Italy, has studied the Hessdalen site since 1996 and found that rocks
in the valley are rich in zinc and iron on one side of the river running
through it, and rich in copper on the other side.
‘If there is sulphur in the water in the middle, it makes a
perfect battery’ he said.
Together with a colleague from the University of Bologna,
the scientists used rock samples to create a miniature valley and dunked them
in river sediment.
They found that electricity flowed between the two rocks and
that this could light a lamp.
Dr Monari believes that bubbles of ionised gas are created
when sulphurous fumes from the River Hesja react with the humid air of the
valley. The geology also forms electromagnetic field lines in the valley, which
could explain why the orbs of light move around.
‘This electrical field creates a path that could be the
‘main road’ of the lights inside the valley,’ Dr Monari told Caroline Williams.
Bjorn Gitle Hauge, an electrical engineer at Ostfold
University, thinks that the energy needed to make the clouds glow could come
from the charge building up.
There are many other competing theories as to how the light
may be formed, although the battery theory seems to be the most probable based
upon current evidence.
Some experts think some sort of plasma causes the light as
when a gas ionises it forms a cloud of ions and electrons – plasma – that
produce light. Plasmas can be cool to touch and can also kill microbes, but
they require incredibly high temperatures and a huge supply of energy to be
produced.
Others believe the lights are a type of ball lightning
because similar balls of light spotted and analysed in China showed they were
formed of silicon, iron and calcium – which are present in the Hessdalen
lights, along with the addition of an element called scandium.
But the Hessdalen lights do not appear when there is
lightning, leading Dr Hauge to suggest another idea.
He proposed that the valley’s shape, climate and geology
generate a massive electric charge and that static electricity on the mountains
were whipped up by strong winds.
Other experts believe the lights are powered by
radioactivity and the decay of radon in the atmosphere. They think the lights
are made from ‘dusty plasma’ containing ionised dust particles.
They will search for the presence of radon in the valley to
test their idea that bubbles of the gas could erupt from the ground, pick up
dust and enter the air as a glowing orb.
Whatever the reason for the lights’ formation, the answer
could lead to a new way of storing energy.
‘If we have some kind of installation that we could pick up
charged particles and lock them inside, then you can store energy,’ Dr Hauge
said.
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