- #1
mrmojorising
- 9
- 0
Opposite charges are built up between lightning clouds and the earth, which creates a potential, which causes lightening.
Say you had a voltmeter that could handle infinite current and with leads hudnreds of meters long, and you stuck one lead onto a cloud which is about to create lightning and the other lead into the Earth -- i assume the voltmeter would read a large voltage.
Now say you stuck one lead into the cloud and the other lead into empty space -- would the voltmeter read 0 voltage or a large voltage? If it owuld read 0 voltage, why is that? The cloud contains charge, so it creates an electrci field againt which it takes work to move a charge, even into empty space some distance away from the cloud, so there should be a voltage recorded?
So if there is a voltage recorded between a cloud which is about to release lightning and empty air why is it that if i put one lead of a voltmeter on a positive terminal of a power supply and the other on a negative terminal i get a voltage, but not if i put one lead onthe positive temrinal and the other in air?
I mean the positive terminal is not only psoitive with trespect to the negative terminal, but also i assume its positive compsared to surrounding vacuum (or air)? I mean it would take work (which implies a voltage) to move a charge form the positive terminal to a point some distance away in a vacuum - just like for a charged cloud, would it not?
Say you had a voltmeter that could handle infinite current and with leads hudnreds of meters long, and you stuck one lead onto a cloud which is about to create lightning and the other lead into the Earth -- i assume the voltmeter would read a large voltage.
Now say you stuck one lead into the cloud and the other lead into empty space -- would the voltmeter read 0 voltage or a large voltage? If it owuld read 0 voltage, why is that? The cloud contains charge, so it creates an electrci field againt which it takes work to move a charge, even into empty space some distance away from the cloud, so there should be a voltage recorded?
So if there is a voltage recorded between a cloud which is about to release lightning and empty air why is it that if i put one lead of a voltmeter on a positive terminal of a power supply and the other on a negative terminal i get a voltage, but not if i put one lead onthe positive temrinal and the other in air?
I mean the positive terminal is not only psoitive with trespect to the negative terminal, but also i assume its positive compsared to surrounding vacuum (or air)? I mean it would take work (which implies a voltage) to move a charge form the positive terminal to a point some distance away in a vacuum - just like for a charged cloud, would it not?