Sure. Electricity can be produced from any sound, by using a microphone.
Thunder is not electricity itself, but rather the sound that results from the rapid expansion and contraction of air heated by a lightning bolt. Lightning is a discharge of electricity that occurs during a thunderstorm, which can produce the sound we hear as thunder.
we can produce the electricity how i can explain energy is universal constant we now that energy is neither be created not be destroyed so we want to know that why the thunder is produced and then we can made artificial and we can generate power
Thunder does not effect electricity, it is the lightening that accompanies it.
Well, thunder doesn't actually produce lightning. Lightning produces thunder.
Batteries do not produce electricity, they only store electricity.
The thunder is a result of lightning because thunder has air molecules that are superheated o make electricity
lightning static electricity thunder
The electricity in the clouds.
The electricity produced by thunder, specifically during a thunderstorm, is not harnessed for practical use. Thunder itself is the sound produced by the rapid expansion of air surrounding a lightning bolt, which is the actual phenomenon that carries electrical energy. While lightning can be captured and converted into electricity, the phenomenon of thunder does not have any direct application for energy use.
When static electricity is discharged in the air, it can produce a visible spark or a crackling sound. This occurs as the built-up electric charge is neutralized by moving from one object to another, usually through the air.
generators produce electricity via electromagnetic induction
Thunder and lightning are not the same. Lightning is a natural discharge of static electricity that occurs in the atmosphere during a thunderstorm, while thunder is the sound produced by the rapidly expanding and contracting air surrounding a lightning bolt. Both thunder and lightning are indeed related to electricity.