Can Lightning Shatter a Diamond in the Desert?

AI Thread Summary
Diamond is not broken by lightning because it is a poor conductor of electricity. Lightning primarily damages materials that allow large currents to flow, which does not occur in insulators like diamond. The discussion also touches on the impressive visuals of lightning, with participants sharing links to stunning photographs and discussing the techniques used in capturing such images. The conversation highlights the beauty of lightning photography, mentioning a friend's experience in the desert during a thunderstorm to achieve striking results.
Thallium
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Can lightning break diamond..? :redface:
 
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No, diamond is not a good conductor of electricity.


---------------
A useful site for chemistry resource
http://groups.msn.com/GeneralChemistryHomework
 
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Not even because of the force of the lightning? Can only materials that are good conductors of electricity break by lightning then?
 
Thallium said:
Not even because of the force of the lightning? Can only materials that are good conductors of electricity break by lightning then?
I guess so. It is the large current that flows through an object that breaks is. So when you have got an insulator, no current will flow and no damage will be created.

By the way, I'm wondering whether this very nice picture of lightning is real.
It looks so amazing that I almost can not believe it's real:

:smile: :smile: :smile:
gene.wins.uva.nl/~skowalcz/lightning

Or click http://gene.wins.uva.nl/~skowalcz/lightning , but maybe that doesn't work
 
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It did not work.. The page was babyblue.. Bbayblue lightning? :)
 
Thallium said:
It did not work.. The page was babyblue.. Bbayblue lightning? :)
Then you should just copy this link

gene.wins.uva.nl/~skowalcz/lightning

and paste it in a new window. That works for sure.
 
thats an awesome pic! where was it taken?
 
A buddy of mine did a lot of photography. When he went out to Vegas, he went into the desert during a night-time thunderstorm. He mounted his camera rigidly, and left the shutter open. It looks like someone else did that for the pic, but maybe they stuck some filters in for a few different shots. I think the peak output of a lightning strike is in the UV.

Njorl
 

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