Attract Lightning: Can You Use an Electro-Magnet?

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Using a negatively polarized electro-magnet to attract lightning is not feasible, as magnets do not possess positive or negative charges. Storms develop voltage differences rather than being polarized, which leads to lightning discharges. Lightning occurs when a significant charge imbalance between a cloud and the Earth reaches a breakdown voltage, resulting in a spark. Therefore, no magnet can influence or attract lightning based on its charge. The concept of using magnets to manipulate lightning is fundamentally flawed.
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Could you use a negatively polarized electro-magnet with a positively charged lightning storm to attract lightning to strike at your position?
 
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xthomasbhx said:
Could you use a negatively polarized electro-magnet with a positively charged lightning storm to attract lightning to strike at your position?

What do you mean by negatively polarized electromagnet? Magnets has both north and south poles there's no sense of positive or negative.
 
Like the magnet is polarized south and the storm is polarized north, could you cause lightning with that sceniro?
 
xthomasbhx, storms are not polarized. Storms do, however, develop voltage (charge) differences which, can cause a lightning discharge. No magnet will attract or repel voltage.

Lightning is voltage-dependent. Storms separate charges into positive and negative volumes. If a cloud was highly negative relative to the Earth below it, once the "breakdown voltage" was reached we expect a "spark" or lightning bolt would jump between those two charged volumes and therefore discharge that great imbalance (or, neutralize the difference in potential).
 
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