Schools

KMHS Students Build Low-Cost Weather Device

The students used a coffee can, electrical components and a motorcycle battery to build a device that measures lightning potential.

Using a coffee can, electrical components and a motorcycle battery, students from and the in Marietta recently completed and tested a field mill device that monitors the buildup of electrical charge in nearby clouds, reported Georgia Tech Research News.

Notably, the accuracy of the $200 device's readings of electrostatic charge—a critical measure of lightning potential—was comparable to that of a $5000 commercial model. The findings could lead to important advancements in severe weather research.

The students—David Brinkmann, Matthew Bond, Alex Hale and Andrew Brinkmann from Kennesaw Mountain's Academy of Math and Science Magnet Program and Stephen Pfohl from The Walker School—effectively passed the torch to one another over several semesters as interns at the Georgia Tech Research Institute's Severe Storms Research Center. Most of the students have since gone on to college.

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