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13 answers

Thunder and Lightening actually happen at the same time.

When a giant mass of cooler air meets a giant mass of hotter air, they do not simply mix and make medium temperature air! The difference in temperatures actually makes the air masses have very different properties, so when the meet, they are actually colliding.

When the two masses collide, they create tremendous friction, which creates static electricity. This friction between the masses rumbles, pops, rolls and claps depending on how they interact. At the higher points of friction more static electricity is created making more, louder sound, and more lightning.

The only reason lightning and thunder are "separated" is because light and sound travel at different speeds. As you travel away from the center of the friction (typically a rain storm, although not always) the light gets to you more quickly than the sound of the event, thus it appears that they are exclusive of each other.

Lightening and Thunder are not a cause and effect relationship. Lightening does not cause thunder, and thunder does not cause lightening.

2006-07-19 11:03:43 · answer #1 · answered by zero_vertical 2 · 0 0

Thunder is the sound that lightening makes and always comes after lightening. The closer the sound of thunder to the strike of lightening indicates that you're close to where the lighening is striking.

When lightening strikes, it creates shock waves that are heard in the form of thunder. Because light travels faster than sound, there is usually a gap between seeing the lightening and hearing the thunder.

2006-07-19 06:30:09 · answer #2 · answered by Michelle M 2 · 0 0

I can't wait to see some of the answers for this one. Thunder is the result of lightening. The lightening actually cuts a path through the air, ionizing the air molecules as it travels. Thunder is what that sounds like... CRAAACK!!!!

Hey Remi... FIVE (5) seconds per mile not 1!!!!

2006-07-19 06:27:42 · answer #3 · answered by Bullfrog_53 3 · 0 0

~Lightening comes before thunder.~

Thunder is the noise of the + and - charges in the clouds coming together; lightening is the visual, u c lightening 1st because the speed of light travels faster than sound.

(If u count "1 mississippi, 2 mississippi..." between the strike of the lightening and the boom of the thunder, then however many seconds u counted is how many miles away the storm is.)

2006-07-19 06:26:02 · answer #4 · answered by Miss 4 · 0 0

This is created by a difference in electric charge between the clouds and the ground. The thunder is the sound, and the lightning is what you see.

2006-07-19 06:42:52 · answer #5 · answered by M 4 · 0 0

lightning is an electrical discharge from clouds to the ground. Thunder is the noise associated with the lightning. There is a delay between lightning and thunder because of the differing speeds between lightning and thunder.

hope that helps! :-)

2006-07-19 06:27:39 · answer #6 · answered by bablunt 3 · 0 0

thunder and lightening have a relation but don't tell the sun.
kidding...sorry, i don't know, but i'll keep watch on this question because i've wondered that before, too.

2006-07-19 06:27:06 · answer #7 · answered by blackolivesrule 4 · 0 0

Thunder is the sound made by shock waves of superheated air caused by heat from lightning. Thunder travels at the speed of sound (about 1100 feet per second) and the light from lightning at 186000 miles per second, approximately.

2006-07-19 06:26:54 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Thunder is the sound caused by the lightning as it heats the air. They occur together, but light and sound travel at different speeds, so they reach our senses at different times, particularly when the event occurs farther away.

Check these sources to learn more.

2006-07-19 06:31:20 · answer #9 · answered by LovingMother 4 · 0 0

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2016-10-08 02:25:51 · answer #10 · answered by vanderbilt 4 · 0 0

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