A thunder shake is not a recognized term. It may refer to the sensation of the ground shaking or vibrations produced by thunder, which can be felt during intense thunderstorms or earthquakes.
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.
It moves because thunder is just sound caused by lightning super heating air and sound is just motion through particles in the air. So basically your house is being hit by tons of atoms moving from a lightning strike somewhere in the sky.
Well, thunder doesn't actually produce lightning. Lightning produces thunder.
The abbreviation for Thunder is TH.
Thunder
No. Lightning produces a shockwave in the air, which we call thunder.
No, Kira from "Power Rangers Dino Thunder" and Shake It Up's CeCe are not the same actresses. Kira in "Power Rangers Dino Thunder" was played by actress Emma Lahana whereas Bella Thorne that plays the role of CeCe on Disney's "Shake It Up!"
this could be found in a piece of timber cut from a tree that has been struck by lighting which upsets the grain
yea u cna see it if its loud enough to shake your windows otherwise no u just hear thunder u see lighting
During a storm, thunder is caused by the rapid expansion of air heated by lightning. This sudden expansion creates shock waves that travel through the air, causing vibrations that can shake the house.
A slightly more accurate answer:Thunder can shake a TV and cause any loose connections to mess up. But its the lightning that really messes with the electronics.
P waves are also faster than S waves, and this fact is what allows us to tell where an earthquake was. To understand how this works, let's compare P and S waves to lightning and thunder. Light travels faster than sound, so during a thunderstorm you will first see the lightning and then you will hear the thunder. If you are close to the lightning, the thunder will boom right after the lightning, but if you are far away from the lightning, you can count several seconds before you hear the thunder. The further you are from the storm, the longer it will take between the lightning and the thunder. P waves are like the lightning, and S waves are like the thunder. The P waves travel faster and shake the ground where you are first. Then the S waves follow and shake the ground also. If you are close to the earthquake, the P and S wave will come one right after the other, but if you are far away, there will be more time between the two.
Amigo's Parlor Shake Shake Shake was created in 2000.
K.C. and the Sunshine Band. Shake Your Booty.
The future tense of "shake" is "will shake" or "shall shake."
Metro- Station
Yes, the noun thunder is a mass noun. Multiples of thunder are expressed as the object of a preposition (a lot of thunder, claps of thunder, rolls of thunder, etc.), or using an adjective (loud thunder, rumbling thunder, deafening thunder, etc.)