Geography, asked by Anonymous, 1 month ago

When lightning strikes the ocean why don't all the fish die?
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DOn't dare to spam xD

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
6

Rather than creating an irregular narrow, ionised path, the charge from the lightning strike spreads out sideways and downwards in an expanding half sphere from the surface. Any fish within a few tens of metres of the same strike point would probably be killed but beyond that they would just feel a tingle.

Hope this helps you balak xD

Answered by itzkanika85
1

Answer:

Rather than creating an irregular narrow, ionised path, the charge from the lightning strike spreads out sideways and downwards in an expanding half sphere from the surface. Any fish within a few tens of metres of the same strike point would probably be killed but beyond that they would just feel a tingle.

Explanation:

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Warm regards:Miss Chikchiki

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