it might and if lucky only severly injure somebody
A sound wave can kill a person because let's say its too loud yes it can because the pressure between the person and the sound wave is too much and is it explodes you ears that make your brain go out of function
Lighting is a noun (a gerund). It is the present participle form of the verb (to light). It can be used as a noun, or in participial phrases (lighting the way), or as a verb (is lighting, were lighting, will be lighting).
Lighting can only occur from cloud to ground.
Lighting continuity refers to ensuring consistency in lighting within a scene or across different shots in a film or video production to maintain visual coherence. Maintaining lighting continuity involves matching the intensity, color temperature, direction, and quality of light to create a seamless look throughout the production. Filmmakers use various tools and techniques to achieve lighting continuity, such as lighting diagrams, lighting setups, and color correction in post-production.
The phenomenon that causes the color of an object to appear differently to a person is called "color constancy." This is when our brain adjusts the perceived color of an object based on the surrounding lighting conditions and context.
yes
Only after he dies.
Yes. It can kill you.
yes
A lighting engineer
You can if it didn't kill you.
Kill
Tornadoes kill more people and cause more damage than lighting.
Yes, it actually can! Although most people are lucky and survive.
I don't believe it could kill you, but you could go blind from staring directly into a light for too long.
George Kovacs, who passed away in 2007, was a lighting specialist. He is the person who first introduced the world to halogen lighting in the form of the floor torchiere.
yes dehydration can kill a person very quickly.