Can Lightning Create a Sonic Boom?

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Sound is produced when two metal objects collide, but the objects themselves do not necessarily need to vibrate for sound to occur; the air can vibrate instead. The collision can push air, creating sound waves similar to thunder or clapping hands. Sound is essentially a wave traveling through a medium, such as air, which carries the vibrations to our ears. In the case of lightning, the intense heat from the bolt superheats the surrounding air, creating an explosive sound effect. Thus, while vibrations from the objects can contribute to sound, the movement of air can also generate audible waves independently.
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If two metal objects hit, do the objects have to vibrate to make a sound? Or can the air itself vibrate with the sound?
 
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Is there was no air, could you hear the metal objects when they hit?
 
If the objects did not vibrate, what would cause the air to vibrate?
 
I don't know. I thought sound was the result of potential energy being released as kinetic energy (I don't know much about this, bear with my ignorance :| ). So one of the metal objects would have to vibrate for there to be sound?
 
The sound is a wave traveling in the air. When the objects hit they beame sourses of these waves. If there is a medium for these waves to travel (i.e. the air) they will reach at your ears and you will hear the sound.
 
HallsofIvy said:
If the objects did not vibrate, what would cause the air to vibrate?
The collision itself will push air, creating a sound like thunder or clapping hands. The objects themselves need not vibrate.
 
Oh, okay. That's what I was wondering. Someone told me that one of the objects would have to vibrate for there to be sound, but I figured the air alone would do it. A thought, is this how things like lightning make sound?
 
In a way. Thunder (the sound of lightning) is basically the aftermath of an explosion. A lightning bolt is in the millions of degrees, which superheats the surrounding air much as a high explosive such as C-4 would. That overpressure radiates in all directions from the path of the bolt, so the inverse square law applies to the intensity where it's heard.
 
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