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Lightning superheats the air around it to roughly five times the surface temperature of the sun
A single lightning bolt heats the narrow column of air around it to roughly 54,000 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the U.S. National Weather Service. That figure is about five times the temperature ...
A single lightning bolt heats the air around it to roughly 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit in a fraction of a second, a temperature about five times that of the Sun’s visible surface. That extreme figure, ...
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