joyever
- 14
- 0
during lightning when two clouds attract each other on that time, they loss some of its mass??
The discussion revolves around whether clouds lose mass during lightning events, particularly in relation to the processes involved in lightning and the nature of clouds. Participants explore various aspects of mass loss, including the role of water droplets, electron flow, and energy release during lightning.
Participants express multiple competing views on the nature of mass loss during lightning, with no consensus reached on whether mass is lost or how it should be defined in the context of clouds and lightning.
Participants highlight the complexity of defining cloud mass and the dynamic nature of clouds, which complicates discussions about mass loss. There are unresolved questions regarding the precise effects of lightning on cloud mass and the role of energy transfer.
There are both positive and negative lightnings, actually positive (cloud-positive, ground-negative) are more common.KingNothing said:Are you asking if the electron flow from the lightning affects the mass? In that case, I guess it would very slightly. I'm not sure if the electrons flow into or out of a cloud.
joyever said:during lightning when two clouds attract each other on that time, they loss some of its mass??
klimatos said:Clouds are phenomena consisting of many different kinds of ongoing actions. They are dynamic, not static. They have no fixed boundaries, no fixed mass, no fixed anything.
Intracloud lightning is far more common than intercloud lightning. There is no significant "attraction" between clouds during lightning events or at any other time.
They have.jewbinson said:So clouds don't have electric charge? (stupid question but whatever)
jewbinson said:So clouds don't have electric charge? (stupid question but whatever)
The answer is: lots of droplets fall to ground and sink there. Some droplets grow bigger and heavier, as water vapour condense on them. Some other lose their mass due to vapourisation. Overall balance is: the cloud usually loses lots of its mass, dominantly due to raining. However, in an early stage of thunderstorm, it is still growing.joyever said:So if we consider it as total mass of droplets what would be the answer?
joyever said:So if we consider it as total mass of droplets what would be the answer?
I see some inconsistency in your question.joyever said:The question here is not about droplets. My question is would mass be lost during lightning as energy is released..
joyever said:The question here is not about droplets. My question is would mass be lost during lightning as energy is released..