It depends on where the lightening strikes. If it's very far away from you, it should be very quite. If it's right in front of your house, it should be VERY loud. It's because thunder is sound and it takes time to travel to your ear and the volume decreases the further you are from it.
when the hot air from higher up meets with cooler, lower air and they collide and create thunder & when thunder happens, lightening is created after thunder
Yes, "heat thunder" is a term used to describe thunder that is heard during hot, humid weather, often associated with summer storms. It occurs when lightning strikes, causing rapid expansion of air, which creates the sound of thunder. However, the term can be misleading, as the thunder itself is not caused by heat; rather, it is the atmospheric conditions during hot weather that can lead to thunderstorms.
Thunder storms occur when hot air and cold air run into each other. Therefore one way of predicting them is if you notice a cold front has come during warm weather, or a warm front during cold weather.
The sound caused by the rapid expansion of air along an electrical strike is thunder. Lightning heats the air rapidly, causing it to expand quickly, which creates a shock wave that we hear as thunder.
When lightning strikes with no thunder, it is called heat lightning. This phenomenon occurs when lightning is too far away for the sound to be heard but the light can still be seen. Heat lightning is typically observed on hot summer nights.
No, Thunder is really the sound what we hear when the hot and cool clouds mix.:)
thunder road
when the hot air from higher up meets with cooler, lower air and they collide and create thunder & when thunder happens, lightening is created after thunder
Yes, "heat thunder" is a term used to describe thunder that is heard during hot, humid weather, often associated with summer storms. It occurs when lightning strikes, causing rapid expansion of air, which creates the sound of thunder. However, the term can be misleading, as the thunder itself is not caused by heat; rather, it is the atmospheric conditions during hot weather that can lead to thunderstorms.
Thunder Road
The Long Hot Summer - 1965 Day of Thunder 1-17 was released on: USA: 19 January 1966
Thunder is the sound of lightning, because lightning moves faster then sound it takes a few seconds for the sound to catch up. So there is no sound of thunder, thunder is just the sound of lightning.
well it usually makes a thunder Storm
http://www.answers.com/topic/tom-cruise as Les Grossman: the foul-mouthed and hot-headed studio executive producing Tropic Thunder.
i dont know all of them but know 2 Courtney and Kaitlyn... courtney is hot...
thunder comes after the lightning. so, the lightning is related to how thunders are form. when lightning strikes, it warms the air surrounded to it. then, when the hot air meets and crash with each other, they make a noise.
Heat thunder is a term used to describe the phenomenon of thunder that occurs during unusually hot weather conditions, typically during a heatwave. The intense heat can create instability in the atmosphere, leading to the formation of thunderstorms and lightning. Heat thunderstorms are often accompanied by strong, gusty winds and heavy rainfall.