x
Breaking News
More () »

What was really going on in the viral video that appeared to show a man being struck by lightning?

Does a now-viral video really show a man getting stuck by lightning?

In a heart-stopping video that made its way around the Internet last week, it appeared that a man came within inches of a lightning-strike catastrophe outside the Academy for Technology and Academics in Horry County, South Carolina.

The now-viral video shows Romulus McNeill recoil and run after a bolt of lightning flashes frighteningly close to him. McNeill, 49, is originally from Baltimore and currently lives near Myrtle Beach where he works as a school counselor.

“I felt like something did hit me, something did touch me,” McNeill told Inside Edition.

"There was a big boom and there was a big bright flash and I was just trying to get out of there as fast as I can," McNeill told AccuWeather in a telephone interview. "I didn’t know what happened, all I know is that something that was quick and intense and powerful and I just wanted to get to my car."

However, AccuWeather Meteorologist Jesse Ferrell said what was seen in the video was not a direct lightning strike.

“This man was not struck directly by lightning, but was close enough to give him a good scare,” Ferrell said. “Based on the shadows of the trees in the video, I’d say a flag pole, building or tree in the upper right of the photo, off camera, was the object that was struck.”

Ferrell, who said that he has been similarly close to a strike like McNeill on numerous occasions, also added the possibility that McNeill could have been electrocuted from ground currents. A ground current can put people at risk when the electricity from a lightning strike flows through the ground away from the point where the original strike was.

Others have suggested that a screenshot of the video portrays a captured moment of an upward leader. However, Ferrell also added that is extremely rare and unlikely as well.

An upward leader, also known as a streamer, is when channels of electricity reach up from the surface to try to make a connection with a bolt of lightning coming down. While this possibility isn’t impossible in McNeill’s situation, Ferrell explains that it is extremely unlikely that the streamer would have been captured on video.

“Video cameras generally have frame rates that are too slow to show upward leaders, which exist for only microseconds before a lightning strike,” Ferrell said. “As far as I know, upward leaders have only been captured on video once, at 9,000 frames per second by Tom Warner of ZT Research.”

For comparison, Ferrell said that a security camera like the one that captured McNeill’s scary encounter, would be around 30 frames per second, at best.

“Upward leaders may have also been captured on one frame of a video by Dan Robinson, who has been using photography and videography to capture lightning for 30 years,” Ferrell said. “Are we really to believe that this security camera footage is the third example?”

Rather than this being another example of the rare upward leader or a direct strike, Ferrell argues that this is much more likely an instance of “ghosting,” when a reflection from the camera’s lens imprints on the video’s frame.

Robinson explained in a blog post that videotaped lightnings strikes commonly defect in at least one frame of the image.

“The artifact appears in the form of a ‘ghost’ lightning bolt in the bottom half of the video frame,” Robinson wrote. “Due to its position on the screen, this ‘ghost’ lightning bolt appears as if it is a very close lightning channel relative to the observer/camera.”

Robinson goes on to explain that a ‘ghost channel’ is simply an image of the lightning striking faster than the camera’s shutter can resolve, causing the image of the channel to bleed across the lower section of the frame.

In McNeill’s case, the fact that he was seen in the video picking up his dropped umbrella and jogging inside also indicates the unlikelihood of a direct strike or electrocution.

"When I hear the word thunderstorms, you won’t see me with an umbrella in my hand. Period," McNeill vowed.

No matter the determination, McNeill was right to be frightened and respond with fear to the incident that has now made him semi-famous.

“I’m always careful about lightning, but what I’m going to be more cautious about now is that when I do see lightning, I’m going to avoid going outside at all costs,” McNeill said to AccuWeather.

“I’m just glad that I’m able to share my story so hopefully it helps other people bring awareness to lightning strikes.”

This story was originally published on AccuWeather.com.

Before You Leave, Check This Out