"Lightning does not always create thunder. In April 1885, five lightning bolts struck the Washington Monument during a thunderstorm, yet no thunder was heard."
Seems very weird...doesn't this refute some scientific 'facts'?

Niyoke wrote:err i know ium soudning weird but .. Mr Bow is my p.e teacher .. ARE YOU MR BOW? LMAO ?
However, the grumbles and growls we hear in thunderstorms actually come from the rapid expansion of the air surrounding the lightning bolt.

X-Lax wrote:don't trust stories that are over 100 years old.

X-Lax wrote:don't trust stories that are over 100 years old.



Icealya wrote:well, the lighting I shoot from my hands never have thunder with it, cuz that would just ruin a perfectly surprise jolt... it's especially fun when there are a few people holding hands.. then you can shoot one in the middle and the two on the ends get the shock... or you shoot the total left one and the total right one get's it...

Priam wrote:Icealya wrote:well, the lighting I shoot from my hands never have thunder with it, cuz that would just ruin a perfectly surprise jolt... it's especially fun when there are a few people holding hands.. then you can shoot one in the middle and the two on the ends get the shock... or you shoot the total left one and the total right one get's it...
....
ffs.


Priam wrote:It means 'For ****(s) sake'. It's a low sarcastic sort of figure of speech in this case aimed at your totally random and quite weird/stupid comment, in a serious discussion topic.

We'd need more information about our deceased (I'd presume) observers to know if this applies...Fraser wrote:From the website: Bad Meteorology brought to you by Alistair B. Fraser:
"What is, unfortunately, called heat lightning is just ordinary lightning seen from too far away for its thunder to be heard. Since such observations have often been made with clear skies overhead, and since hot summer evenings particularly favor this type of observation, there has arisen a popular misconception that the presence of diffuse flashes in the apparent absence of the clouds themselves implies that the lightning is somehow occurring in the atmosphere merely as a result of the heat. It isn’t so. The clouds and the ordinary lightning are just a long way away."


Priam wrote:Thunder is not created by the actual lightning, it's created by the clashing of some stuff within the clouds, or the clouds itself. Dont remember exactly, they crush over eachother creating the rolling sound.
Icealya wrote:Priam wrote:It means 'For ****(s) sake'. It's a low sarcastic sort of figure of speech in this case aimed at your totally random and quite weird/stupid comment, in a serious discussion topic.
Ooooh....
Well, I was just trying to make ya'll laugh...








Kratos wrote:I always thought lightning creates thunder only if they tocuh the ground. (which is not always the case)


Icealya wrote:Priam wrote:It means 'For ****(s) sake'. It's a low sarcastic sort of figure of speech in this case aimed at your totally random and quite weird/stupid comment, in a serious discussion topic.
Ooooh....
Well, I was just trying to make ya'll laugh...
nohunta wrote:Kratos wrote:I always thought lightning creates thunder only if they tocuh the ground. (which is not always the case)
Lets clarify something, Lighting Comes from the ground up. Its goes Up, not down.
Lightning heats nearby air to about 10,000 °C (18,000 °F) nearly instantly, which is almost twice the temperature of the Sun’s surface. The heating creates a shock wave that is heard as thunder.

SPYCOPPER wrote:Priam wrote:Thunder is not created by the actual lightning, it's created by the clashing of some stuff within the clouds, or the clouds itself. Dont remember exactly, they crush over eachother creating the rolling sound.
yea we know u smart LOL

Kratos wrote:nohunta wrote:Kratos wrote:I always thought lightning creates thunder only if they tocuh the ground. (which is not always the case)
Lets clarify something, Lighting Comes from the ground up. Its goes Up, not down.
I just mean IF lightning touch the ground. like it doesnt crete sound if it's within clouds.
But anyways , from wikipedia :Lightning heats nearby air to about 10,000 °C (18,000 °F) nearly instantly, which is almost twice the temperature of the Sun’s surface. The heating creates a shock wave that is heard as thunder.
Priam wrote:Thunder is not created by the actual lightning, it's created by the clashing of some stuff within the clouds, or the clouds itself. Dont remember exactly, they crush over eachother creating the rolling sound.
nohunta wrote:Kratos wrote:I always thought lightning creates thunder only if they tocuh the ground. (which is not always the case)
Lets clarify something, Lighting Comes from the ground up. Its goes Up, not down.
