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The discharge was the name given to the release or surge of electromagetic energy that resulted from Desmond's triggering of the Swan station's fail-safe system. Similar electromagnetic events also occurred when Ben turned the frozen wheel beneath the Orchid station -- and in 1977 when the DHARMA Initiative drilled into the energy pocket at the Swan site thereby causing the Incident. ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")  ("There's No Place Like Home, Part 2")  ("The Incident, Part 1")

The Incident

Main article: The Incident

When Stuart Radzinsky disregarded Pierre Chang's warnings about drilling into a pocket of energy located below the Swan site in July 1977, he triggered a magnetic anomaly with the same effect as a system failure in later years within the Swan. With a huge electromagnetic surge, metallic objects of increasingly larger size began being dragged across the ground and flying through the air into the drill shaft. Pierre Chang was wounded when the drill mechanism above the shaft collapsed, crushing one of his arms. Phil was killed and Juliet was inadvertantly dragged into the shaft by a chain that became tangled around her. Badly wounded at the bottom of the shaft, Juliet managed to possibly detonate the hydrogen bomb which may or may not have changed the future. ("The Incident, Part 1")

Aftermath

The complete aftermath of the Incident is not known, but led to the DHARMA Initiative setting up a special protocol at the Swan requiring two occupants to continuously enter the Numbers into a computer and select Execute every 108 minutes in order to prevent another incident. This act was described by Kelvin as "saving the world." ("Orientation")  ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")

Fail-safe activation

The fail-safe was a mechanism in the Swan station which, when triggered, would terminate the electromagnetic anomaly. As described by Kelvin, the fail-safe was the "only other way out" and turning the key would make it "all go away." After the destruction of the Swan's computer, the countdown timer reached zero and a system failure occurred. The magnetic force behind the sealed area of the station began to surge, forcing Desmond to activate the fail-safe system. ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")

Discharge

External effects of the discharge, in chronological order ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")

Aftermath

The nature of the fail-safe and its repercussions are unclear. The discharge resulted in a blinding white glow covering the entire Island with the sky turning a violet color. The ground shook, as if an earthquake was occurring, and a painful buzzing sound was heard (like a blender, according to Hurley). The Swan itself apparently imploded, leaving nothing behind but a large crater in the ground and assorted debris. The event was powerful enough to lift or repel a number of objects, among them the heavy hatch door. It landed a considerable distance from its original location, narrowly missing Bernard and Claire at the beach camp. Locke, Desmond and Eko survived the event, despite all three being inside the hatch at the time. ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")  ("Further Instructions")

In a deleted scene from "Exposé", Nikki reacted particularly drastically to the "purple sky", first by completely freaking out such Paulo had to calm her down, and subsequently by questioning her past behavior towards her fellow castaways. The event was subsequently referred to by the survivors variously as a "detonation", "implosion", "explosion", a "blowing up", or the "sky turning purple".

The Others later referred to it variously as an "anomaly", the "sky turning purple", or an "electromagnetic pulse". After the event, Tom said that the pulse shut down the Others' communications. Mikhail also said there was an electromagnetic pulse which knocked out the submarine's underwater beacon. ("Every Man for Himself")  ("Not in Portland")  ("Par Avion") It was later implied, however, that the communications disruption may have been unrelated to the discharge, as Ben had secretly ordered Greta and Bonnie at the Looking Glass station to jam all communications to and from the Island. ("Through the Looking Glass, Part 1") Further evidence of this comes when Tom meets with Michael in New York weeks after the discharge, implying that Tom was still able to leave, and return to, the island, and Ben is able to use the radio in his house to contact Michael on the freighter. ("Meet Kevin Johnson")

Terminalflat

"Electromagnetic Anomaly Detected" in the listening station ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")

The effects of this event were also detected by the men working for Penelope Widmore at the Antarctic listening station. The discharge was reported there as an "Electromagnetic Anomaly". They apparently had missed a similar one previously (possibly a reference to the day Oceanic 815 crashed), and questioned whether it was another false alarm. ("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")

Fail-Safe Effects

  • Charlie was in close proximity to the Swan's implosion, but apparently remembered nothing of the discharge.("Live Together, Die Alone, Part 1")
  • Locke woke up in the jungle, apparently unhurt, but initially without the ability to speak. ("Further Instructions")
  • Eko was knocked unconscious, leaving him helpless against a polar bear that dragged him into a cave. ("Further Instructions")  ("The Cost of Living")
  • On turning the fail-safe key, Desmond became unstuck in time, his mind re-experiencing events in his past. He awoke in the jungle with his clothes inexplicablyl missing - but later gained a limited ability of experiencing flashes or premonitions of the future. These appeared to cease upon Charlie's death. ("Flashes Before Your Eyes")
  • The high dose of electromagnetic energy that Desmond was exposed to after turning the fail-safe key seems to have contributed to the side effects he experienced after leaving the Island to travel to the freighter. This is suggested by Daniel asking if Desmond has been subjected to an intense dose of radiation or electromagnetic energy. ("The Constant")

Frozen Wheel rotation

FDK

Ben turning the Frozen Donkey Wheel. ("There's No Place Like Home, Part 2")

OffAxis

Locke fulfills his destiny and turns the frozen wheel ("This Place Is Death")

The Frozen Wheel is an eight-spoked wheel set into a wall of a secret chamber located beneath the Orchid station although was built many years earlier by an unknown civilization on the Island. Ben turned the wheel, with great effort, causing a discharge similar to when Desmond turned the fail-safe key. Unlike the earlier event, however, this discharge also caused the island to disappear. Ben indicated earlier that turning the wheel would cause the Island to be "move." ("There's No Place Like Home, Part 2")

Aftermath

When Ben turned the wheel a huge, blinding white glow surged outward to cover the entire Island. From a perspective well offshore, the Island appeared to vanish, leaving nothing but open sea behind. The Oceanic Six, Frank and Desmond were forced to crash-land their helicopter in the ocean. The remaining individuals on the Island, survivors aboard the Zodiac raft and Jin were "inside the radius" and were moved along with the Island. Ben himself was transported to Tunisia some ten months in the future.("The Shape of Things to Come")  ("There's No Place Like Home, Part 2")

After Ben turned the wheel, the survivors, newcomers from the freighter and Juliet became unstuck in time. ("Because You Left") The time shifts appeared benign at first, but began to have side effects - being described by Daniel Faraday as being similar to severe jetlag. The individuals who had spent the most time on the Island were affected first, beginning to develop symptoms of headaches and progressively worse nosebleeds and hemmoraging. Charlotte, who had lived the longest on the Island in her childhood, was eventually killed by time shifts. ("Because You Left")  ("This Place Is Death")

With the time shift symptoms became worse and worse with each flash, Locke took it upon himself to return to the Orchid -- where he learned from a manifestation of Christian Shephard that the time flashes were the effect of Ben turning the wheel. Realizing the wheel had slipped off its axis, Lock set the wheel back in place - and, in turning it, was transported years into the future to Tunisia in 2007. The Island the the rest of the survivors ceased time shifting and became permanently lodged in 1974. ("The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham")  ("LaFleur")

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