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How does lightning come ?

2007-03-29 13:31:49 · 8 answers · asked by blank 1 in Science & Mathematics Weather

8 answers

In the atmosphere, tiny dust particles rub against each other creating HUGE amounts of static electricity. The excess charge wants to discharge and goes towards the nearest object, which are usually trees and buildings. the lightning is the exchanging of electrons.

2007-03-29 13:39:14 · answer #1 · answered by didida 2 · 0 0

Lightning has been scientifically proven to spawn from the domestic arguments of Thor Cruise and his wife Oprah. Whenever they're fighting, his wife screams screams angrily, "THOOHOOOORR!!!!!!!!!!!! WHY HER???" That is the voice we know as the sound of the thunder. Thor is usually so startled while drinking his pint of mead that he accidentally hammers lighnting bolts when he hears his wife's scream.

Nobody knows why the old and barbaric married couple keeps fighting all the time, but so it is. Many have claimed that Thor drinks too much mead, while some have said that Thor has too many affairs with other women. Another theory is that Thore smote his wife many years ago, and made her live with him instead of sending her to valhalla. Scientists are still arguing about this subject.

Thor Cruise loves to add ice cream from the clouds to his mead. However in 2001 the Scandanavian government tried to put a tax on this, but Thor got angry and rebeled against this; his anger caused "The Great Lightning of 2001". The government eventually allowed him to continue tax free. Hollywood made a film about his legal battle called "Vanilla in the Sky" Thor Cruise stars as himself.

2007-03-29 13:37:34 · answer #2 · answered by Katey 3 · 0 1

Lightning comes from the GROUND up to the cloud, I know what your thinking but you can check for yourself. Clouds are POSITIVE charge and as you kow the earth is NEGATIVE, when enough charge on both sides are close enough (trees,buildings,radio towers) or the concentration builds up they come together just like a static shock,BUT from the ground first, what we see in the blue color is the burning of atoms not the strike itself. Like I said check it out. Cloud to cloud is not actualy a strike but a transfer.

2007-03-29 15:10:46 · answer #3 · answered by OMC- DR.DEATH 1 · 0 0

The separation of positve and negative electrons within a cloud. Negative electrons buildup in a cloud and when positive electrons from the ground buildup, a spark occurs. Picture the cloud as a big fluffy sock. When you walk across a carpet and touch something metal, you get a static charge. It's the same concept.

2007-03-29 13:37:24 · answer #4 · answered by Drink Beer 3 · 2 0

Hi. Friction of rising air builds up an electric charge, like walking on a carpet in dry weather. The build up gets to a level called the 'breakdown voltage' and the electricity goes to the nearest place it can to equalize. Sometimes another cloud, sometimes the ground.

2007-03-29 13:35:38 · answer #5 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

it quite is pronounced as thundersnow? whether thunderstorms are much less person-friendly in the wintry climate, sometimes lightning can happen interior of snowstorms. pronounced as thundersnow, particularly reliable instability and plentiful moisture could be chanced on above the outdoors, inclusive of above a heat front, particularly than on the outdoors the place it might desire to be below freezing. Thundersnow is typically pronounced downstream of the large Salt Lake and the large Lakes throughout the time of lake-consequence snowstorms, too. whether it may happen different places, whether uncommon it has occurred in Scotland this 3 hundred and sixty 5 days. Beulah

2016-10-01 22:10:32 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It's called magnetohydrodynamics. Apparently the earth's magnetic field is enough to create the effect under storm conditions. It's very complex, and not well understood. But that's the gist.

2007-03-29 13:38:46 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

up and down and multiple and sideways and up to 25 miles away were the storm is not even arround it could strike and at anytime like a flashflood anywere anytime all over

2007-03-29 15:42:15 · answer #8 · answered by peter w 4 · 0 1