ChatterBank0 min ago
lightning
how many atoms make up a lightning bolt?
this is a question on my 6th graders homework, I have looked everywhere for an answer, please help.
thanks
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by jenny27. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As Ansteyg says, lightning is a discharge of "static" electricity. It is very large numbers of electrons passing at near light-speed along a channel of air which has become ionised (so making it conduct).
So in that way the answer is no atoms -- it is electrons passing along ions. Ions are atoms or molecules which have lost or gained charge.
(What is sixth grade...? I'm not sure how difficult your homework is likely to be).
Because in another way ions are still atoms... The number of ions involved will be quite hard to calculate. You need to know the average length and diameter of a lightning bolt (so getting the volume), then from the density of air, work out the number of atoms in the air enclosed by that volume (easy so far...). Though the air is super-heated, so it will be much less dense than usual. Then you need to know what proportion of the molecules in that air are ionised, and so are participating in the "bolt".
I'm afraid I don't know any of these numbers, except the length -- up to a mile or two (you can calculate a minimum length by counting the time from the beginning to the end of a roll of thunder, if the bolt is going towards or away from you).
Twiglet --
"How many" does not necessarily mean an exact number, does it? "How many miles to the sun?": 93 million -- that's only to the nearest million at best.
It's like the old story of the museum attendant who says the T rex skeleton is 70,000,005 years old. Why the five -- how can we be so accurate? Well of course, it was 70 million when it arrived, and that was five years ago...