Lightning occurs naturally in weather while sparks occurs only in electric chemical reactions.But,if you compare it on physical form they are thee same.
No. Sparks itself is not energy. Sparks come from fire. Fire is energy, but not the things that come of it (sparks).
Because of the very high voltage of lightning, an opto isolator can't block it, the best is to relay any lightning to ground but that is still not a guarantee that the spike will be stopped. Lightning voltage is in the Giga Volt range.
Lightning rods are used to direct the force of the strike safely as possible and in a direct line as possible to ground. This direct path usually saves surrounding structures from damage.
A lightning arrester (or lightning rod) works by providing a low resistance path to earth. This directs a lightning strike down the side of a building instead of it spreading through the electrical system.
Fire does not attract lightning. These two things are different sources of energy and are not proven to attract each other.
In the Miller-Urey experiment, a high-energy source such as UV light or electric sparks could replace lightning to simulate the energy input needed for chemical reactions to occur. These energy sources can help drive the formation of simple organic compounds from inorganic molecules, similar to what may have happened on early Earth.
Sparks! And when the distance is large enough, lightning!
Lightning would be one.And the sparks of static electricity you see are too.
Both contain plasma.
black car. convertible with red hot sparks on the side
lightning storms
Vulcan, the blacksmith god. Zeus hurled lightning bolts.
through simulate lightning
He flew his kite during a storm and the metal key picked up the electricity from the lightning.
they both make echos
Electricity is created by the movement of electrons in a particular direction. A large jump of electrons results in sparks, or even lightning.
You can use high voltage static electrical generators to produce long sparks that resemble miniature lightning strikes. For the real thing, atmospheric scientists in Florida have fired rockets that trail a wire behind to trigger lightning strikes from charged clouds. This is very dangerous and should not be attempted by amateurs.