![]() ![]() In addition to its electric attacks, the Ultimate Lightning Staff also has a high round one hit melee attack (up to round 16) and also an alternate mode. It's Ultimate super attack fires a larger ball of electricity that chains from zombie to zombie, killing many zombies in a close knit horde. As you might expect the base Lightning Staff shoots electric bolts of lightning that electrocute zombies caught in it's path. The weapon in question is the DG-2, or Wunderwaffe as it's known, which dates back to the original World at War zombies series via it's introduction in Shi No Numa. Like the Wind Staff, the Lightning Staff bares a strong resemblance to an existing Wonder Weapon. Upgrading all of the base staffs to their Ultimate versions is also one of the steps for the main Easter Egg. Their attacks remain the same and their build and upgrade processes are also identical. All of the original staffs have been preserved and remastered in the Zombies Chronicles (DLC 5) pack for Black Ops 3. As usual, the guide contains a detailed walkthrough together with puzzle solutions and screenshots to help you out. In this guide I'll show you a faster way to get this done and also cover the complete steps for upgrading the Electric Staff and enjoying what is an excellent adversary. Elmo's fire - when the masts of ships scrape through a strong electric field.The Lightning Staff is one of the underloved staffs in Origins, mainly because of it's time consuming part collection and upgrade process. These small-scale electrical effects could cause Martian dust clouds to glow purple on Earth, sailors sometimes see a similar glow - known as St. "A more likely possibility is that Martian dust storms display innumerable small sparks - called streamer discharges and glow discharges," Méndez Harper said. Given the low atmospheric pressure on Mars, it's unlikely that even the fiercest dust storms would ripple with lightning the way terrestrial volcanoes or thunderclouds do. Although the researchers detected shocks in their Martian dust fountain electronically, they observed no visual effects resulting from the collisions. What would those charges look like? It's hard to say. For the researchers, then, this study provides the first reliable experimental evidence of triboelectric charging on Mars. The team found that the colliding particles did result in small triboelectric sparks, even when those dust grains did not come into contact with the container. ![]() Unlike prior experiments, however, the team used jets of carbon dioxide to stir the grains into a "fountain" of colliding particles that never touched the container wall. Similar to previous experiments, the team used volcanic ash grains (from Mexico's Xitle volcano, which erupted about 1,700 years ago) to simulate Martian dust particles, and enclosed them in a glass tube under conditions simulating the Martian atmosphere. Méndez Harper and his colleagues tried to correct this experimental design flaw in their new study. These containers are made of stuff that doesn't exist on Mars, meaning the experiments don't really teach us anything about what happens within the Red Planet's dust storms. In other words, in past studies, any observed sparks may have actually been between a dust particle and the side of the container enclosing it, rather than between two simulated Martian dust particles. "The containers often had wildly different chemistries - plastic, metal or glass - that could have produced the observed electrical effects." "These works did not account for the possibility of charging arising from the interaction between simulated Martian dust and experimental containers enclosing it," Méndez Harper said. Sometimes, those particles (which have similar compositions to Martian dust) do spark - but according to the new Icarus paper, these studies may be fundamentally flawed. ![]() Studies dating back to the 1970s have tried to simulate Martian dust storms on Earth by shaking up volcanic ash in small, low-pressure containers. Because Mars has much lower atmospheric pressure than Earth does, it's unlikely that powerful charges could build up there, Méndez Harper said. On Mars, however, it's unclear whether triboelectric charging happens at all. Windblown dust storms like these might be charged with "innumerable small shocks" of electricity, the new study found. A "serpent" dust devil snakes across Mars. ![]()
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