hearing
Yes, lightning can hit bats while they are flying. However, bats often seek shelter during storms, so they are less likely to be struck by lightning compared to other animals.
Having a tongue piercing does not make you more likely to get hit by lightning. Lightning strikes are random and not influenced by piercings or metal objects in the body. It is always important to take standard safety precautions during a storm to avoid being struck by lightning.
Yes, lightning strikes can hit humans, but this is rare. When a person is struck by lightning, it can cause severe injuries such as cardiac arrest, burns, and neurological damage. It is important to take precautions when outdoors during storms to reduce the risk of being struck by lightning.
While it is possible for an umbrella to get hit by lightning due to its metal frame, the likelihood is low compared to taller objects like trees or buildings. It is generally safe to use an umbrella during a thunderstorm, but it is recommended to seek shelter indoors to avoid any risk of being struck by lightning.
This is not true. Some places have been hit many times. The Empire State Building, for example, is hit by lightning an average of 100 times per year. If you looked at it from a simple perspective, most spots are never hit by lightning, but one bolt does not affect the chances of another striking. So the chances of the same spot getting hit twice completely at random are extremely low. However, lightning is not completely random. Tall objects naturally attract lightning, so objects such as towers and mountains tend to be struck fairly frequently.
hearing lol
Yoshi
Yes planes are frequently hit by lightning.
Sense - The Lightning Seeds album - was created on 1992-04-13.
No standing next to a dog in a thunderstorm does not increase the chance of getting hit by lightning? Dogs have a better sense to the earth around them. Probably standing right next to a dog will have a lower chance saying they will run away from where possible lightning can strike.
A metal structure, at tall as that will be hit by Lightning repeatedly and frequently. Something they'd have known about when building it. Not even asking "when was it struck last" would make much sense. The answer would be something like "when the last thunderstorm passed over Paris."
Your question makes no sense!
When a person gets hit by lightning, they are struck by the lightning bolt itself rather than the heat or electricity radiating from it. The current typically enters the body at the point where the lightning makes contact, such as the head or shoulders, and travels through the body to the ground.
It is when to lightning thingys are the same and hit the ground at the same time.
because lightning attracts to wood
the hide.
No!