Saint Elmo’s Fire

elmo

Cloud of the Day – Saint Elmo’s Fire

Image credit - Wikimedia

Image credit – Wikimedia

Saint Elmo’s fire is sometimes confused with ball lightning, but the two phenomena are quite different. While Saint Elmo’s fire is a well-understood and predictable electrical event, ball lightning is unpredictable and not yet fully understood. Saint Elmo’s fire is always associated with solid objects, such as ship masts and airplane wings, while ball lightning’s main identifying feature is its independence.

Image credit - John Kain

Image credit – John Kain

Saint Elmo’s fire forms when there is a strong electrical field around the object (mast or wing, eg) which causes air molecules to become ionized, creating a visible plasma. It’s a relatively mild cousin of lightning. In a mechanism similar to aurora, the ionized nitrogen and oxygen molecules fluoresce with blue or violet light.

Image credit - Wesley Wong

Image credit – Wesley Wong

Since Saint Elmo’s fire is a remarkable phenomenon it naturally has its attendant superstitions, most notably among sailors, who were most at risk during strong electrical storms. Some of them thought it was a bad omen, while others thought it was a sign that their saint (Elmo) was watching over them. We humans tend to think that these things are about us.

Saint Elmo’s fire is not dangerous. It won’t set things on fire and it won’t kill you if it touches you. If you’re lucky enough to see it, just enjoy it, although you should take the normal precautions for the associated thunderstorm.

rjb

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Unglue.it

Unglue.it Logo

Unglue.it Logo

Unglue.it wants to set books free. The method they’ve chosen is to pay the people who hold the rights to the books to secure their freedom. So, if someone finds a published book that they’d like to free, they nominate it on the Unglue.it website, and Unglue.it approaches the rights holder. They say how much money they’d like and Unglue.it runs a crowdfunding campaign to raise it. If the campaign is successful, then the book is liberated under a Creative Commons license. Something like Green Comet’s CC license.

In their words.

Unglue.it offers a win-win solution to readers, who want to read and share their favorite books conveniently, and rights holders (authors, publishers, etc.) who want to be rewarded for their work.

We run crowdfunding campaigns to raise money for specific, already-published books. When we reach goals set by the rights holders, we’ll pay them to unglue their work. They’ll issue an electronic edition with a Creative Commons license as specified during the campaign. These licenses will make the edition free and legal for everyone to read, copy, and share, worldwide.

Unglue.it is free to join and explore. Supporters pledge money only if they choose to support campaigns, and the amount is up to them. They are charged only if the campaigns reach their goal price. Unglue.it takes a small percentage from successful campaigns, with the remainder going to the author, publisher, or other rights holder.

Here’s the Unglue.it blog.

The driving force behind Unglue.it is Eric Hellman

Unglue.it's Eric Hellman

Unglue.it’s Eric Hellman

Unglue.it is a service provided by Gluejar, Inc. It’s a place for individuals and institutions to join together to liberate specific ebooks and other types of digital content by paying authors and publishers to relicense their works under Creative Commons licenses.

Eric Hellman, President of Gluejar, is a technologist, entrepreneur, and writer. After 10 years at Bell Labs in physics research, Eric became interested in technologies surrounding e-journals and libraries.

Where does Green Comet come in?

Unglue.it has been missing one important piece of functionality to make this vision real. We haven’t had a way to reward rights holders that have already given their books Creative Commons licenses to make them free. So we’ve added that functionality. We’re calling it “Thanks for Ungluing.”

They asked me if I’d like Green Comet to come unglued, and I said yes.

Green Comet's Unglue.it page

Green Comet’s Unglue.it page

rjb

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Winter

Photo credit - Dave Whalley

Photo credit – Dave Whalley

We’ve got snow on the apples and frost on the yew.

Photo credit - Ed Dukes / Melanie Matwichuk

Photo credit – Ed Dukes / Melanie Matwichuk

Winter sometimes looks like magic happened.

Photo credit - Pilar Graner

Photo credit – Pilar Graner

We get plenty of valley fog, which might go away by sundown.

Photo credit - Linda Sheehy-Brownstein / Dave Whalley

Photo credit – Linda Sheehy-Brownstein / Dave Whalley

And then there’s more winter magic.

Photo credit - Pilar Graner

Photo credit – Pilar Graner

Sometimes strange apparitions arise out of the fog.

Photo credit - Helen Foreman

Photo credit – Helen Foreman

The spirits of winter are artists, too.

Photo credit - Oliver Photo Club - click for larger version

Photo credit - John Chapman – click for larger version

From the humble . . .

Photo credit - Oliver Photo Club

Photo credit – Brandt Leinor / Randy Rotheisler

To the dramatic.

Photo credit - Oliver Photo Club - click for huge version

Photo credit – Brandt Leinor – click for huge version

rjb

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