Speaking of lightning.
Here we must first address a common misconception:
That is, the explosion speed of lightning is not the speed of light; its propagation speed is the speed of light.
A complete lightning is composed of two parts, namely the leader and the return stroke.
The former is when the air ionizes to establish a path, and the latter is the current flowing from the ground to the clouds.
In terms of speed, the former is slow, and the latter is fast.
The average speed of the leader process is 1.5×10^5 meters per second, about 1/2000th of the speed of light.
While the speed of the return stroke is much greater than the leader speed, almost 1/10th of the speed of light.
Therefore, theoretically speaking.
As long as the computational power of the equipment is sufficient, it is possible to humanly locate the lightning's strike point.
And coincidentally...
The rabbits can indeed achieve this currently.
The technical support comes from our current T1 supercomputer:
