yes it can
i guess it all depends on were it is directly at and lighting can go until it hits the ground
Lightning can strike houses during a thunderstorm, but thunder itself is simply the sound produced by the rapid expansion and contraction of air surrounding a lightning bolt. It is not the lightning strike itself, so thunder does not directly hit houses.
Lightning can strike the same place multiple times because it is attracted to tall and conductive objects like trees, buildings, and monuments. The Empire State Building, for example, is struck by lightning around 25 times a year.
On average, lightning strikes the Earth about 44 times per second, or roughly 1.4 billion times a year. However, this frequency can vary depending on weather conditions.
A cell tower can receive multiple lightning strikes in just one year, but due to the construction, the energy received from the lightning bolt is transferred to the soil at the base of the tower. Cell towers, like any tall metallic object, is a beacon to lightning and the higher the tower is in height, the more susceptible it is to receive the strike.
Of course lighting can strike anything
its impossible to know exactly where lightning will strike
Always
200 milli seconds
yes
Yes.
There is no "most deadly lightning strike". Lightning either kills or doesn't.
Tornadoes kill more people and cause more damage than lighting.
i think it was like 3 times
the two clues that lightning is about to strike is 1. hair is sticking up 2 dark stormy sky
Yes, its more likely as the humidity increases.
i guess it all depends on were it is directly at and lighting can go until it hits the ground