"Anomalous luminous phenomena (ALP) — long-duration plasma spheroids documented most systematically at Hessdalen, Norway — exhibit physical properties that conventional plasma physics cannot adequately explain: sustained self-confinement for tens of minutes, periodic pulsation, multi-chromatic emission, and a documented responsiveness to laser stimulation bearing the hallmarks of an intelligent reaction rather than a passive optical interaction. This paper proposes a unified conceptual and partially mathematical framework built on three interlocking hypotheses. The Intelligent Plasma Hypothesis (IPH) argues that plasma balls can acquire a quantum-coherent internal structure functionally analogous to neuronal microtubule networks, satisfying the conditions of the Penrose–Hameroff Orchestrated Objective Reduction (OrchOR) theory."
Later the paper states this:
"Since 1984, the Hessdalen Valley in central Norway has been the site of one of the most sustained and methodologically careful investigations of anomalous luminous phenomena (ALP) in scientific history. Over four decades, instrumented field campaigns — equipped with cameras, spectrometers, radar, magnetometers, and eventually high-speed photometers — have documented thousands of events in which self-luminous plasma spheroids appear at low altitude, sustain themselves for periods ranging from minutes to an hour, pulsate with measurable periodicities, and on one occasion react to laser stimulation in ways that resist explanation by any known photon-plasma interaction mechanism (Strand, 1984; Teodorani, 2004)."
The paper then gives these interesting details:
"The phenomena appear as self-luminous spheroids ranging from roughly thirty centimetres to ten metres in diameter, hovering at altitudes from ground level to about two hundred metres above the valley floor, predominantly near geological fault lines rich in piezoelectric minerals (Devereux, 1982). Their continuum spectra are consistent with a partially ionised plasma at electron temperatures of the order of ten thousand Kelvin. Normally their luminance can reach values comparable to a searchlight, but in some cases it can be much higher. But what most distinguishes them from any known variety of ball lightning is their duration: while ball lightning events typically last a fraction of a second to a few seconds at most, Hessdalen events routinely persist for ten to sixty minutes — three to five orders of magnitude longer (Figure 1). No classical plasma physics mechanism of confinement explains this discrepancy (Teodorani, 2004, 2008)."
Google Gemini infographic visual on this phenomenon
