A Little Lightning Advanced Activity
Background
Electric charges can build up on an object, but an object doesn’t stay
charged forever. Eventually the charged object will become neutral
again as it gains or loses additional electrons. A loss of static charge
is called static discharge.
Static discharge can happen slowly, as when a balloon sticks to a
wall, then, over time, falls to the floor. It can also happen quickly,
as when you shuffle your feet on carpeting, then touch a metal doorknob.
Zap! The sound you hear is the air heating and expanding from
the energy in the spark. |
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Lightning is nothing more than a sudden electric discharge—but on a very large scale. Raindrops
in thunderclouds get tossed around by air currents. The friction causes them to become
charged. The negatively charged drops collect in the bottom of the cloud, while the positively
charged drops flow toward the top. When the opposite charges move toward one another to
restore a neutral condition, a giant spark is created. ZAP!
Thunder is caused by the heating and expansion
of the air around the spark. Lightning and
thunder occur simultaneously, but because
light travels faster than sound, you will see
lightning before you hear the thunder, unless
the storm is directly overhead.
In this activity, you are going to build up electric
charge on an object and then discharge
it, producing miniature lightning bolts and
thunder that sounds like, well, static. For
best results, work in a quiet, dark room on
a dry day. |
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Materials
Steps
1. Blow up a balloon and tie it off. Turn off the lights and close the window shades. The room must be
pitch-dark.
2. Rub the balloon vigorously against your clean, dry hair. Then slowly move your clean, dry index finger
toward the balloon. Repeat several times. What do you see and hear?
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3. Describe how electric charge builds up and is discharged in this activity.
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4. It takes about 5 seconds for sound to travel one mile. How far away is the storm if you hear
thunder:
10 seconds after you see the flash?___________________________________________________
15 seconds after you see the flash?___________________________________________________
2.5 seconds after you see the flash?___________________________________________________
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