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翻訳の問題を報告
I also avoid using my cellphone next to a window because I heard of people who got struck by lightning through their windows.
And I avoid using phone if I'm walking through a storm; not only because of the lightning but I don't want my phone to get wet.
Lightning follows the path of least resistance. It'll go for tall electrically conductive objects such as trees, it can't "burst through a window" and won't home-in on your electronics. It's extremely unlikely that you'll suffer a power surge, and even less likely that a power surge would damage your PC. Most PCs have automatic kill-switches to protect them in case of any electrical anomaly.
I would go outside in a storm and often do. Walking along a street is perfectly safe, you're only in danger if you're the easiest way for a lightning bolt to ground. IE standing on a golf course or on top of a bald hill.
Same here, the state I live in (according to CurrentResults) is one of the states that sees most thunderstorms, which is nice. Though I will wake up to a giant thunderstorm and sound reverberation.
It's a little different where I live. Houses are very far apart and there is little other electronic interference. So I don't know about the exact science but I've seen lighting hit a pole by my house a few years ago. Not exactly comforting
There's very little science to it. Lightning follows the easiest path to the ground, therefore it will strike the tallest electrically conductive object. If there's a pole near your house, you're perfectly safe.
Having your house struck by lightning is nothing to worry about. That has actually happened to me once, when I was living in a rural area. It was incredibly loud but did no damage.
Phone? Yes
Remember this is electricity with enough power to arc thousands of feet through AIR without a wire. A couple millimeter gap triggered by a surge protector, or even a few feet of gap isn't going to save you if you're in the path of it.
It's actually lower power surges that you have to worry about due to parts of the grid being knocked out.
Why fear a storm? Admittedly there are some types that can harm you(Tornados and Hurricanes), but electrical storms are harmless.
I grew up in the subtropics, we had thunderstorms every day of summer and regular hurricanes. Trust me when I say, your average thunderstorm is nothing to be afraid of. Even if you're caught outside.