When I pulled the peel ply off quickly, the line where it separated
glowed bright purple for about 1/2 second. I couldn't believe it, so
I went and got a couple witnesses and immediately they saw the ply
turn from dim white to bright purple too. I proceeded to pull a
large section off very quickly and that lit up the section of peel ply
from underneath!
Has this ever happened to anyone else? Any explanation how it could
even be possible?
We held the separation line up to the light and studied it when it was
perfectly still. There wasn't the slightest bit of purple showing, as
it wasn't being ripped off. The only explanation I can muster is, the
breaking of molecular cross-linking caused a temporary, chemical
reaction, that is not visible unless the epoxy is really fresh and the
surrounding light is not too bright.
>
> Has this ever happened to anyone else?
yep.
> Any explanation how it could
> even be possible?
>
to me, it look's like an electric discharge. but i have to leave a thorough
explanation of this phenomenon to someone else.
uli
static electricity.
try taking a polyester shirt off in the dark.
Stealth Pilot
it had to be static electricity...not because of the color per se, but
the bright glow...pretty cool
Tony
> it had to be static electricity...not because of the color per se, but
> the bright glow...pretty cool
Not likely static electricity, but coronal discharge. There's
a difference between a static field and an electric field (a magnetic
field is something else again). A visible spark is static; coronal
discharge (St. Elmo's Fire), or plasma, is electric field activity.
And that's as much as I know. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Elmo's_fire
Dan
> Not likely static electricity, but coronal discharge.
It's neither, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triboluminescence
Jason
That is actually more than you know about it. There are electric fields
and magnetic fields, there is not "static" field.
Matt
That looks about right.
Dan
> That is actually more than you know about it. There are electric fields
> and magnetic fields, there is not "static" field.
>
> Matt
You are right. Thanks for the correction. It's not "static" or
"electric" but "static electric." I found this:
http://www.greenfacts.org/en/static-fields/#1
Dan
It's neither, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triboluminescence
Wow, the things you can learn, entirely by accident.
Real interesting stuff!
--
Jim in NC
> Have you ever seen the green flash on the horizon? ;o)
>
> Tony
<blinking innocently>
A couple times from the beach across the street from my youngest
daughter's place in Honokowai, Maui.
And a couple weeks ago driving west on Hwy 152 about 15 miles east of
Los Banos, CA. Didn't expect that one.
The time I saw in on the Oregon coast I thought I had been looking at
the sun to long... Years later I found out what it was all about...
Tony