metal is a conductor and rubber is an insulator
metal is a conductor and rubber is an insulator.
I believe you mean "Why doesn't rubber conduct electricity" Conductors share a property in that they have "loose" electrons where the electrons can move from one atom to the next. That's what electrical current is, the movement of electrons in a conductor. Rubber doesn't have these "loose" electrons and therefore will not conduct electricity. These materials are called insulators.
not strike for another 30 seconds
A lightning rod (US, AUS) or lightning conductor(UK) is a metal rod or metallic object mounted on top of a building, electrically bonded using a wire or electrical conductor to interface with ground or "earth" through an electrode, engineered to protect the building in the event oflightning strike. If lightning hits the building it will preferentially strike the rod and be conducted to ground through the wire, instead of passing through the building, where it could start a fire or cause electrocution.A lightning rod is a single component in a lightning protection system. Lightning rods are also called finials, air terminals or strike termination devices. The lighting rod requires a connection to earth to perform its protective function. Lightning rods come in many different forms, including hollow, solid, pointed, rounded, flat strips or even bristle brush-like. The main attribute of all lightning rods is they are conductive.
Tires conduct electricity. Tires contain a large amount of carbon black to stabilize the rubber and the carbon black is electrically conductive. If the tires were insulators, the rolling insulator (tires) would cause a static electric charge to build up on the vehicle. Vehicles with insulators for tires/wheels have ground straps dragging the ground bonding the chassis to the ground.
they attract electricity. Metal (especially tall metal things like ladders, cell towers, etc etc) will attract lightning - as do larger bodies of water. The safest place in an electrical storm is (if you can't be inside your house) as low down in valley as you can get - high things tend to attract lightning, so don't stand under a tree. Your car is safe as well, so long as you don't step outside - the tires will ground you from any danger.
yes, but after a laptop has been striked by lightning, it will most likely not boot.
Stay as low as you can because the lightning will strike tall things.
It could, but it would be more likely to strike a metal part.
The odds of a lightning strike do not necessarily increase after an initial strike. Each lightning strike is an independent event, and the odds of the next strike are determined by various factors such as weather conditions and geographical location. While lightning can be more likely during certain weather patterns, there is no direct correlation between subsequent strikes based on a previous one.
Generally circuit breaker is not designed to trip off in the event of lightning. The system has lightning arrestors which reroute the lightning effect to earth instantly. If there are no lightning arrestors then the equipment are likely to fail upon a lightning strike.
Yes. Lightning CAN strike anything.
Lightning does strike ships.
because lightning will strike it
yes, because water is a very good conductor of lightning
daily mainly arson and lightning strike fires
The Lightning Strike was created on 2008-10-24.
because (fork lightning in particular) lightning starts on the ground!