It says uh-oh, dies and explodes. Then some one steps on one of the prickly things and they blow up
No idea
The glass ball is for ornamental purposes only. Nothing happens to it when lightning strikes it.
Yes, The Auckland Sky Tower gets struck by lightning :D
Lightning occurs from thunderclouds, so the air needs to be warm and moist to produce the thundercloud, which will get a ting of electricity that will cause the strike to reach the ground, only lasting for a fraction of a second. Lightning tends to hit hits the high things. That's why you are always hearing about like the statue of liberty got struck by lightning, or the Empire State Building.
According to FSU the odds of a floridian being struck by lighting at some poing in their life is 1 in 3,000
yes, if you consider that the current flowing into the ground makes a fulgurite along its path of highest current density. What happens is that when lightning strikes the ground, the current flow follows pathways of least resistance. These pathways are the routes the high current is taking into "ground" to be neutralized, and the current heats the material through which it is flowing tremendously. It actually superheats and fuses it along pathways where high current is flowing. Eventually the current "thins out" as multiple pathways bleed off the moving charges. It is around the spot where the bolt struck the ground that the ground gets the most heating, as you'd expect.
The glass ball is for ornamental purposes only. Nothing happens to it when lightning strikes it.
"The same things that happens to everything else." ~ storm (Halle Berry)
Nothing really happens to the person in a car when the vehicle gets struck by lightning as long as they remain in the car. Once a person touches a metallic part of the car and the ground at the same time, they run the risk of electrocution.
Well, it will probably fall down and kill hundreds of people.
Yes, The Auckland Sky Tower gets struck by lightning :D
They die ps you spelt struck wrong A person does not always die after being struck by lightning. There are many occasions where people have survived a lightning strike. You can always do a search on lightning strike survivors and you will see this is true.
It means when someone gets an idea
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.
Lightning is really hot. If you put a marshmellow somewhere in a thunderstorm, and if it gets struck by lightning, I wouldn't say it'd be toasted. It'd be burnt!
It dies
What happens with any other living thing: When it goes through the body, it is basically burning cells, which can cause loss of sight, hearing, or becoming paralyzed. Or worse, it can cause organ failure, seizures, and death.
They most likely will go to war.