Lightning - significado y definición. Qué es Lightning
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Qué (quién) es Lightning - definición

WEATHER PHENOMENON INVOLVING ELECTROSTATIC DISCHARGE
Positive lightning; Lightening; Lightning prevention; Stepped leader; Bead lightning; Megalightning; Positive streamer; Dart leader; Return stroke; ☇; Anvil crawler; Anvil Crawler; Continuous leader; Continuous Leader; Dark leader; Step leader; Staccato lightning; Staccato Lightning; Fulminology; Fulminologist; Lightning fire; Bolt from the blue; Lightning discharge; Different types of lightning; Lightning discharges; Cloud-to-ground lightning; Stepped ladder; Stepped ladder (meteorology); Sheet lightning; Forked lightning; Cloud-to-ground lighting; Ribbon lightning; Fork lightning; Storm electricity; Cloud to cloud lightning; Cloud-to-cloud lightning; 🌩; Flash lightning; Rocket lightning; Sympathetic lightning; Clear-air lightning; Smooth channel lightning; Static lightning; Anvil crawler lightning; Spider lightning; Megaflash; Stepped leader (meteorology); Intra-cloud lightning; Intracloud lightning; CG lightning; CC lightning; IC lightning; Negative lightning; Positive CG lightning; Positive cloud-to-ground lightning; Negative CG lightning; Negative cloud-to-ground lightning; Pearl lightning; Cloud-to-air lightning; Lightning superbolt; Inter-cloud lightning; Intercloud lightning; Upward lightning; Ground-to-cloud lightning
  • Lightning in [[Belfort]], France
  • Anvil Crawler over Lake Wright Patman south of Redwater, Texas on the backside of a large area of rain associated with a cold-front
  • Strike mark on trunk of an [[Oklahoma]] [[black walnut]]
  • Certain prominent structures often attract frequent lightning strikes. The [[CN Tower]] in [[Toronto]] is struck many times every summer.
  • The upper part of the thunderstorm cloud becomes positively charged while the middle to the lower part of the thunderstorm cloud becomes negatively charged.
  • Gigantic jet as seen from the summit of [[Mauna Kea]], Hawaii.
  • (Figure 2) When the rising ice crystals collide with graupel, the ice crystals become positively charged and the graupel becomes negatively charged.
  • Lightning-induced remanent magnetization (LIRM) mapped during a magnetic field gradient survey of an archaeological site located in Wyoming, United States.
  • Lightning strike caused by the connection of two leaders, positive shown in blue and negative in red
  • View of lightning from an airplane flying above a system.
  • Four-second video of a lightning strike, Island in the Sky, [[Canyonlands National Park]], [[Utah]], United States.
  • High-speed, slow-motion lightning video captured at 6,200 frames per second
  • Strokes of cloud-to-ground lightning during a [[thunderstorm]] in the town of [[Oradea]].
  • Cloud-to-ground lightning
  • High-speed photography showing different parts of a lightning flash during the discharge process as seen in [[Toulouse]], France.
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  • Lightning by [[Mikalojus Konstantinas Ciurlionis]] (1909)
  • Lightning strike counter in a museum
  • Strokes of cloud-to-ground lightning strike the ocean off of [[Port-la-Nouvelle]] in southern [[France]].
  • Volcanic material thrust high into the atmosphere can trigger lightning.
  • This CG was of very short duration, exhibited highly branched channels and was very bright indicating that it was staccato lightning near New Boston, Texas.
  • Sound of a thunderstorm
  • Two lightning bolts pictured in the former coat of arms of the [[Yli-Ii]] municipality

lightning         
1.
Lightning is the very bright flashes of light in the sky that happen during thunderstorms.
One man died when he was struck by lightning...
Another flash of lightning lit up the cave.
...thunder and lightning.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
Lightning describes things that happen very quickly or last for only a short time.
Driving today demands lightning reflexes.
ADJ: ADJ n
Lightning         
The electrostatic discharge to the earth or among themselves of clouds floating in the atmosphere. The discharge is accompanied by a spark or other luminous effect, which may be very bright and the effects, thermal and mechanical, are often of enormous intensity. The lightning flash is white near the earth, but in the upper regions where the air is rarefied it is of a blue tint, like the spark of the electric machine. The flashes are often over a mile in length, and sometimes are four or five miles long. They have sometimes a curious sinuous and often a branching shape, which has been determined by photography only recently. To the eye the shape seems zigzag. In the case of a mile-long flash it has been estimated that 3,516,480 De la Rue cells, q. v., would be required for the development of the potential, giving the flash over three and one-half millions of volts. But as it is uncertain how far the discharge is helped on its course by the rain drops this estimate may be too high. There are two general types of flash. The so-called zigzag flash resembles the spark of an electric machine, and is undoubtedly due to the disruptive discharge from cloud to earth. Sheet lightning has no shape, simply is a sudden glow, and from examination of the spectrum appears to be brush discharges (see Discharge, Brush) between clouds. Heat lightning is attributed to flashes below the horizon whose light only is seen by us. Globe or ball lightning takes the form of globes of fire, sometimes visible for ten seconds, descending from the clouds. On reaching the earth they sometimes rebound, and sometimes explode with a loud detonation. No adequate explanation has been found for them. The flash does not exceed one-millionth of a second in duration; its absolute light is believed to be comparable to that of the sun, but its brief duration makes its total light far less than that of the sun for any period of time. If the disruptive discharge passes through a living animal it is often fatal. As it reaches the earth it often has power enough to fuse sand, producing fulgurites, q. v. (See also Back Shock or Stroke of Lightning.) Volcanic lightning, which accompanies the eruptions of volcanoes, is attributed to friction of the volcanic dust and to vapor condensation. [Transcriber's note: The origin of lightning is still (2008) not fully understood, but is thought to relate to charge separation in the vertical motion of water droplets and ice crystals in cloud updrafts. A lightning bolt carries a current of 40,000 to 120,000 amperes, and transfers a charge of about five coulombs. Nearby air is heated to about 10,000 °C (18,000 °F), almost twice the temperature of the Sun’s surface.]
Lightning         
(·vb.n.) Lightening.
II. Lightning ·noun The act of making bright, or the state of being made bright; enlightenment; brightening, as of the mental powers.
III. Lightning ·noun A discharge of atmospheric electricity, accompanied by a vivid flash of light, commonly from one cloud to another, sometimes from a cloud to the earth. The sound produced by the electricity in passing rapidly through the atmosphere constitutes thunder.

Wikipedia

Lightning

Lightning is a naturally occurring electrostatic discharge during which two electrically charged regions, both in the atmosphere or with one on the ground, temporarily neutralize themselves, causing the instantaneous release of an average of one gigajoule of energy. This discharge may produce a wide range of electromagnetic radiation, from heat created by the rapid movement of electrons, to brilliant flashes of visible light in the form of black-body radiation. Lightning causes thunder, a sound from the shock wave which develops as gases in the vicinity of the discharge experience a sudden increase in pressure. Lightning occurs commonly during thunderstorms as well as other types of energetic weather systems, but volcanic lightning can also occur during volcanic eruptions. Lightning is an atmospheric electrical phenomenon and contributes to the global atmospheric electrical circuit.

The three main kinds of lightning are distinguished by where they occur: either inside a single thundercloud (intra-cloud), between two clouds (cloud-to-cloud), or between a cloud and the ground (cloud-to-ground). Many other observational variants are recognized, including "heat lightning", which can be seen from a great distance but not heard; dry lightning, which can cause forest fires; and ball lightning, which is rarely observed scientifically.

Humans have deified lightning for millennia. Idiomatic expressions derived from lightning, such as the English expression "bolt from the blue", are common across languages. At all times people have been fascinated by the sight and difference of lightning. The fear of lightning is called astraphobia.

The first known photograph of lightning is from 1847, by Thomas Martin Easterly. The first surviving photograph is from 1882, by William Nicholson Jennings, a photographer who spent half his life capturing pictures of lightning and proving its diversity.

Ejemplos de uso de Lightning
1. Police pointed to a blackened lightning rod they said showed that lightning struck the armory.
2. Advertisement The Hebrew word for lightning is Barak, and where there is lightning there will also be thunder.
3. The Hebrew word for lightning is Barak, and where there is lightning there will also be thunder.
4. Firefighters also watched for lightning–sparked wildfires.
5. Lightning strikes devastated homes across Plymouth, Devon.