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Scientists finally reveal what really triggers lightning strikes

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 1, 2025, 22:30 IST
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Scientists finally reveal what really triggers lightning strikes​

Lightning is one of nature’s most spectacular and terrifying phenomena. The bright flashes and booming thunder have caught human imagination for centuries, sparking myths, scientific discoveries, and countless questions. While we’ve come a long way since Benjamin Franklin flew his kite in 1752 to prove that lightning is a form of electricity, some key details about how lightning actually begins have remained elusive—until now.

Lightning is triggered by charged particles within thunderclouds. But understanding exactly what happens in those crucial split seconds before the bolt strikes the Earth has remained one of meteorology’s great mysteries. How do the particles move? What forces push them to a breaking point, and what kind of reactions set off such immense energy?


A team of international researchers has now answered these questions using advanced mathematical models and simulations.
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Scientists cracked a centuries-old mystery

Researchers at Penn State University have pinpointed the exact process that leads to lightning formation. Despite more than two centuries of study since Franklin’s time, this moment remained unexplained. Now, using advanced simulations and mathematical modeling, the team has shown how electric fields inside storm clouds set off a fast-moving cascade of particles. These results provide the first clear, step-by-step explanation of lightning’s initiation in nature, according to lead researcher Professor Victor Pasko.

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It starts with an invisible chain reaction

Inside thunderclouds, strong electric fields speed up electrons, turning them into tiny, high-speed bullets. These electrons collide with air molecules like nitrogen and oxygen, creating more electrons and releasing energy in the form of X-rays. This sets off a chain reaction of collisions and energy bursts. According to Pasko, this runaway reaction is like a hidden pinball game that leads to a lightning bolt striking through the atmosphere with unusual force.

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Lightning is hotter than the surface of the sun

The resulting lightning bolt from this chain reaction can heat the surrounding air to around 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit, which is roughly five times hotter than the surface of the Sun. That sudden heat expansion is what creates the loud thunder we hear. The research also clarifies how small regions in clouds, which are barely visible or silent to humans and can hold enough energy to release massive bursts of power in a matter of milliseconds.

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The study also explains ‘dark lightning’

Dark lightning, which is also known as terrestrial gamma-ray flashes, confused the scientists for years. These bursts release high-energy radiation but don’t produce the flash or sound we associate with lightning. The team’s model shows that these X-ray-rich reactions can happen in compact cloud regions with minimal light or radio waves. “This explains why these gamma-ray flashes can emerge from source regions that appear optically dim and radio silent,” said Pasko, as reported in the Journal of Geophysical Research.

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This is a major discovery for science

Co-author and doctoral researcher Zaid Pervez confirmed the model’s accuracy by comparing it with years of lightning observation data. The findings not only solve a long-standing atmospheric mystery but may also help scientists develop better storm detection tools and improve safety measures for aircraft. As Pervez said, the research sheds light on a “wide variety of radio signals” that occur before a strike, offering a new way to monitor storm activity more precisely in the future.

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Copyright © May 24, 2026, 08.40AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service