If the crowd is far away, they may see a distant view of the event or performance, with limited detail. They may hear muffled or faint sounds, depending on the distance and surrounding noise. They may miss out on the full experience and atmosphere compared to being closer to the action.
If you hear thunder long after seeing lightning, it indicates the storm is moving away from you. Thunder is the sound produced by lightning, so the delay suggests the storm is at a significant distance. As long as the delay is significant enough, the risk of being struck by lightning is greatly reduced.
If you see lightning but don't hear thunder, it means the lightning is far away. The speed of light is much faster than the speed of sound, so you usually see lightning before you hear the associated thunder.
No, you are not, but you might be in some medical trouble. Get to your physician right away if this is happening to you.
It is not dangerous because sound travels at a slower speed than light. When you see the flash of lightning, the storm is typically far enough away that the lightning poses no immediate threat. If thunder is heard long after the flash, it indicates that the storm is moving away from your location.
You see lighting and hear thunder.
Because the sun is so freakin far away..Can you hear your neighbors in their house? No but you can see them.
What does mean when you can hear crow from far away
humans are unable to see things that are too small, walk long distance and hear somethin too soft or too far away.
If you hear thunder long after seeing lightning, it indicates the storm is moving away from you. Thunder is the sound produced by lightning, so the delay suggests the storm is at a significant distance. As long as the delay is significant enough, the risk of being struck by lightning is greatly reduced.
If you see lightning but don't hear thunder, it means the lightning is far away. The speed of light is much faster than the speed of sound, so you usually see lightning before you hear the associated thunder.
Can hear and saw are the verbs, but "saw" should be "see".
I assume you mean that the firecracker is some distance away. Sound is very slow compared to light. Sound travels at 300 meters per second, light travels at 300,000,000 meters per second. So you see it long before you hear it.
No, you are not, but you might be in some medical trouble. Get to your physician right away if this is happening to you.
Are you talking about the song "do you see what i see"
why are you able to hear an see
You often hear thunder when you see lightning because lightning produces a sudden and rapid heating of the air around it, causing it to expand quickly. This rapid expansion creates a shock wave that we hear as thunder. The farther away you are from the lightning, the longer it takes for the sound to reach you.
The senses are involuntary since you have no way to 'turn them off' or can ready ignore them. You may not pay attention to a large crowd at a ball game but you still hear and see them.