Cloud-to-ground lightning bolts are a common phenomenon—about 100
strike Earth’s surface every single second—yet their power is
extraordinary. Each bolt can contain up to one billion volts of
electricity.
This enormous electrical discharge is caused by an
imbalance between positive and negative charges. During a storm,
colliding particles of rain, ice, or snow increase this imbalance and
often negatively charge the lower reaches of storm clouds. Objects on
the ground, like steeples, trees, and the Earth itself, become
positively charged—creating an imbalance that nature seeks to remedy by
passing current between the two charges.
A step-like series of
negative charges, called a stepped leader, works its way incrementally
downward from the bottom of a storm cloud toward the Earth. Each of
these segments is about 150 feet (46 meters) long. When the lowermost
step comes within 150 feet (46 meters) of a positively charged object it
is met by a climbing surge of positive electricity, called a streamer,
which can rise up through a building, a tree, or even a person. The
process forms a channel through which electricity is transferred as
lightning.
Some types of lightning, including the most common
types, never leave the clouds but travel between differently charged
areas within or between clouds. Other rare forms can be sparked by
extreme forest fires, volcanic eruptions, and snowstorms. Ball
lightning, a small, charged sphere that floats, glows, and bounces along
oblivious to the laws of gravity or physics, still puzzles scientists.
Lightning
is extremely hot—a flash can heat the air around it to temperatures
five times hotter than the sun’s surface. This heat causes surrounding
air to rapidly expand and vibrate, which creates the pealing thunder we
hear a short time after seeing a lightning flash.
Lightning is not
only spectacular, it’s dangerous. About 2,000 people are killed
worldwide by lightning each year. Hundreds more survive strikes but
suffer from a variety of lasting symptoms, including memory loss,
dizziness, weakness, numbness, and other life-altering ailments.
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