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Writer's pictureHeike Grossi

Why are lightning strikes jagged?


In short, it's because lightning is electricity and air is normally an electrical insulator.


So the channel zigs and zags, step by step, through the air's varying conductivity, thus producing all the extra fireworks. Because of the seemingly random distribution of regions of conductivity, lightning branches may behave wildly, their jagged path often contacting the ground far away from where the channel began inside the cloud. 

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