Re: Lightning without thunder?
- From: Ron Hardin <rhhardin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2006 22:48:34 GMT
Al Deveron wrote:
Is there any known kind of lightning flash that doesn't have
accompanying thunder?
I was camping out a few nights ago, and for about 45 minutes, during
the night, I saw intermittent lightning flashes, but saw no lightning
bolt and heard no thunder. The location was in the South West of
England in a rural area on the coast. The lightning flashes were
bright, white, and powerful and seemed in close proximity. It was the
sort of lightning flash that would normally be quickly followed by a
loud crack of thunder.
TIA
Al Deveron
Sound is refracted by for example temperature changes, and there
may be no path for it from the lightning to you.
You get a mathematical surface with sound on one side and no sound
on the other, the sound side hearing two different paths at once.
Called a caustic surface. What happens in its vicinity requires
a wave solution of the acoustic equations (rather than ray tracing).
The refraction is why a jet plane sounds intermittently loud and soft,
as rays of sound are focussed on you and then defocussed as the ray
passes various thermals refracting it.
--
Ron Hardin
rhhardin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.
.
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