///@facts: đď¸ Every day, around 40,000 thunderstorms crackle around the world, collectively turning Earthâs atmosphere into a giant electrical circuit. The upper reaches of the atmosphere have a positive charge, and the planetâs surface has a negative one. Even on sunny days with cloudless skies, the air carries a voltage of around 100 volts for every meter above the ground. In foggy or stormy conditions, that gradient might increase to tens of thousands of volts per meter.â â _____â â đđˇď¸ Ballooning spiders operate within this planetary electric field. When their silk leaves their bodies, it typically picks up a negative charge. This repels the similar negative charges on the surfaces on which the spiders sit, creating enough force to lift them into the air. And spiders can increase those forces by climbing onto twigs, leaves, or blades of grass. Plants, being earthed, have the same negative charge as the ground that they grow upon, but they protrude into the positively charged air. This creates substantial electric fields between the air around them and the tips of their leaves and branchesâand the spiders ballooning from those tips.â â This ideaâflight by electrostatic repulsionâwas first proposed in the early 1800s, around the time of Darwinâs voyage. Peter Gorham, a physicist, resurrected the idea in 2013 and showed that it was mathematically plausible. In 2018, Erica Morley and Daniel Robert from the University of Bristol tested it with actual spiders.â â
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