No, it would probably die.
Eels live underwater, where lightning does not strike. Bur presuming that you take an eel out of the water and attach it to a kite (as Benjamin Franklin attached a key, in his famous experiment) and fly the kite in a thunderstorm so that the eel winds up getting struck by lightning, the eel would be cooked. You could reel it in and eat it.
Tennis Balls, activated charcoal will certainly not adsorb tennis balls.
The answer is (The energy necessary to move an electron from one orbit to another)
Electrostatic Electric Energy
Both.
Fish + Lightning = Eel
Eels live underwater, where lightning does not strike. Bur presuming that you take an eel out of the water and attach it to a kite (as Benjamin Franklin attached a key, in his famous experiment) and fly the kite in a thunderstorm so that the eel winds up getting struck by lightning, the eel would be cooked. You could reel it in and eat it.
Some would have to be wood , rubber , plastic, and glass. Oh, and if you're wearing an ipod and struck by lightning, the ipod will adsorb the lightning. Although, you'll fry its circuits.
No. Lightning produces thermal energy, but is actually a form of electrical energy.
Lightning is the stream of electron and is considered the electrical energy.
Lightning is seen when it discharges its energy.
Lightning is light energy, or electromagnetic energy. And thunder is sound energy.
Lightning is light energy, or electromagnetic energy. And thunder is sound energy.
Yes lightning is astaticenergy.
electric eel
kinetic energy
That means that the energy in the lightning consists of moving electrical charges (electrons in this case).