As legend goes, inventor, author, and diplomat Benjamin Franklin discovered electricity in 1752 when he tied a key to a kite string and flew the kite in a thunderstorm to attract lightning. Some historians debate whether Franklin actually conducted the experiment, which he described in a letter to the Pennsylvania Gazette. Had Franklin’s kite been struck, he would have been electrocuted. Instead, the metal key channeled ambient electricity in the stormy air. Neither did Franklin discover electricity; he was the first to suggest that lightning was, indeed, electricity. Initially, Franklin and others theorized that electricity was a fluid, and lightning illuminated its flow. The kite experiment presented a leap forward, helping prove that lightning was not a fluid at all - it was simply a huge spark caused by charged electrical forces.
Lightning is still unpredictable and hazardous to experiment with; physicist Georg Wilhelm Richmann died trying to replicate Franklin’s kite experiment. Today, however, technology provides safer ways to study lightning, and satellites now track the unruly electrical phenomena in the atmosphere, allowing researchers to learn more about its role in many of Earth’s processes. Lightning observations are helping researchers predict severe weather and may help pinpoint where wildfires have ignited. Changes in global lightning patterns may even shed light on changes in Earth’s climate.