A photographer in Colorado , hard-to-observe electrical bursts that occur high in the atmosphere, on a flight above Boulder. Jason Ahrns was flying on a special plane from NOAA when he used a dSLR and a window-mounted Gorilla Pod to catch pictures of the sprites, red-colored, split-second electrical bursts that occur at altitudes of about 40 to 45 miles.
While sprites aren’t well-understood (the first photograph of one was captured in 1989) researchers believe that they’re caused by a positively-charged lightning strike which reaches the ground, causing the top of the cloud it originated from to take on a negative charge.
To see Ahrns’s sprite pictures, visit his , or check out video of the sprites, taken at 10,000 frames-per-second, at .