Physics, asked by Brainy2021, 2 months ago

When lightning strikes, electricity passes from the sky to the earth despite the fact that air is an insulator. How does it happen??​

Answers

Answered by devesh2627
4

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In the presence of high current, insulators break down and start acting as conductors, conducting electricity. Under normal conditions, the air around clouds act as an insulator. During lightining, high current is released. The air around the clouds start to break down and begin to conduct electricity. The air acts like wires in a closed circuit helping current flow from the sky to the earth...

Hope it helps...

Answered by Anonymous
8

 \huge \color{pink} \underline \color{seagreen} \underline \color{pink} \tt\star \: answer \: \star

In the presence of high current, insulators break down and start acting as conductors, conducting electricity. Under normal conditions, the air around clouds act as an insulator. During lightining, high current is released. The air around the clouds start to break down and begin to conduct electricity. The air acts like wires in a closed circuit helping current flow from the sky to the earth...

 \huge \color{pink} \underline \color{seagreen} \underline \color{purple} \tt\star \: hope \: it \: helps \: \star

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