10:04 pm!!!!!!
The wound on his back? He was fighting Azula and she used her lightning to strike his back. He was in the Avatar State at the time and was killed then brought back to life. He was in a coma for three weeks.
November 12 1955 10:04PM
Because the main character (Marty) gets trapped in the past and he has to get back to his own time, which is the future from the perspective of the past.
No, I'm afraid not. Time machines may be possible, but the one from Back to the Future and other movies about time travel are just props.
The power of love, and I think back in time.
In back to the future, doctor Brown used a lighting strike to get the required 21 gigawatts to power the time machine, so if you could store the energy of a lightning strike then you would have enough power to power the iron man's suit.
Summer is the time when lightning strikes most often.
Lightning does not strike a clock tower at a specific time. Lightning strikes are unpredictable and can occur at any time during a thunderstorm. Lightning tends to strike tall structures, like clock towers, because they offer a direct path for the electrical discharge to reach the ground.
In back to the future, doctor Brown used a lighting strike to get the required 21 gigawatts to power the time machine, so if you could store the energy of a lightning strike then you would have enough power to power the iron man's suit. (1.21 jigga watts, or 1.21Gigawatts)
Yes, lightning can strike while a rainbow is present. Rainbows occur during or after a rain shower, which can also be associated with thunderstorms that produce lightning. Seeing both a rainbow and lightning at the same time is rare but possible.
The wound on his back? He was fighting Azula and she used her lightning to strike his back. He was in the Avatar State at the time and was killed then brought back to life. He was in a coma for three weeks.
you are probably hearing the thunder from a different lightning strike.
The first time someone noticed a lightning strike.
Only a flux capacitor and a bolt of lightning!
Roughly 1 mile away. Sound travels at about 1 mile every 5 seconds, so the time difference between seeing the lightning and hearing the thunder can give you an estimate of the distance to the lightning strike.
If you hear the thunder almost at the same time as the lightning flash - the storm is directly overhead. Usually - the sound of thunder arrives a few seconds after the lightning, because light travels much faster than sound.
It is possible for lightning to strike daily, if you have a storm system strong enough. For the second part of your question, the a single lightning strike that you see is actually made from multiple strikes that occur relatively at the same moment, and therefore make the "branches" to the single lightning strike. If, instead, you're asking if it's possible for two lightning strikes to happen almost exactly 24 hours apart... yes, definitely. However, it would probably just be coincidence; there isn't anything "magical" going on here, other than that there was either one long-lasting or two separate storm systems passing through on consecutive days.