Skip to content
In Collection · Series
Creatures That Can Kill You
Episode 2 of 5
Back
Dangerous Nature

A lightning bolt is 5× hotter than the Sun

And it strikes Earth 100 times every second.

By Smartasaurus
A lightning bolt is 5× hotter than the Sun
Listen to this article
0:00Tap to play

A single lightning bolt cracks the sky, momentarily searing the air. For a fleeting instant, its core blazes at a temperature of 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit. This intense energy discharges onto Earth’s surface more than 8 million times each day.

The Sun’s surface, a familiar golden orb in our sky, maintains a fervent yet comparatively modest 9,940 degrees Fahrenheit. Lightning, a transient electrical discharge originating in turbulent storm clouds, achieves temperatures five times greater. This extraordinary heat arises from the rapid ionization of air molecules along the bolt's narrow channel, forcing electrons to shed energy as light and heat. The process is swift, lasting mere microseconds, yet it sculpts rock, fuses sand into glass, and vaporizes the very air it travels through.

This celestial electricity sculpts our world, shaping landscapes with sheer, explosive force. It stands as a stark reminder of the raw, untamed power that surges through our planet's atmosphere, a force both destructive and vital in its unyielding expression.

More from Dangerous Nature
A Toxic Rainbow At The Bottom Of The World

The expansion of superheated air around a lightning channel creates thunder.

How did this hit you?
Test what you just learned
Which animal can you literally see through?
The Bird Parents That Attack Anything
Up Next · Ep 3
Continue: Creatures That Can Kill You

The Bird Parents That Attack Anything

5 episodes left in this collection
Play Next Episode
ShareXRedditFacebook