Yes, standing under a tree in a lightning storm is extremely dangerous. Don't do it. But, there's one place you can be that's even deadlier — out in the open. According to NOAA records ...
A single lightning strike can release a 30 million-volt surge, enough to severely injure or kill a person in an instant.
In other words, Samaras will need a stationary storm that is producing lightning again and again ... Then she gives a warning: “Very high electric field.” “The electric-field meter is ...
watching a cow in an open field, when a violent storm arose. She took refuge under a tree, which, at the instant, was struck by lightning ; the cow was killed, and the woman was felled to the ...
Lightning detection systems in the U.S. see an average of 25 million strokes of lightning each year, from some 100,000 storms ... Car-ports, open garages, storage sheds, metal sheds, and covered ...
Many emphasized the importance of monitoring weather conditions during ... highlighting the perilous nature of lightning hazards to individuals engaged in open-field sports.
with teams Juventud Bellavista and Familia Chocca vacating the field. The game was stopped because of an approaching storm, ...
All these flashing yellow dots are lightning storms. They're all part of Hurricane Irma. The storms were tracked by NOAA over a period of 80 hours from September 4th to the 9th. There's a lot of ...