![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjbYSHMIm8TAeH3OR-8_Tc6TkjOApuj0flu9Z_ddNXnbN1K86SMItBK8v_T1Z_803IHvWSadtdMIgdUj0AqyrZT4WWIfZ_dgyOF0VH_beVT-D6UXe059Y-IJa2yAChrN3k9UrEVn__Z5UZL/s400/lightning_tree%5B1%5D.jpg)
When I was in France, there was a massive storm during my last week there and lightning struck the tree in the neighbor's yard. Lightning is charging by induction. Friction in the clouds make the cloud polarized into a positive top region and a negative bottom region. When the cloud is polarized, the earth too becomes polarized; the negative charge at the bottom of the cloud induces a positive charge at the surgace of the ground below. Lighting is when a transfer of electrons between the clouds and the ground occurs.
3 comments:
wow! that's also why you're not supposed to stand under a tree during a lightning storm... the charge flows right down the tree and radiates outward on the ground around the tree.
i love france! that picture is pretty trippy. tres cool!
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