Link to newsround

Why does lightning often happen above volcanoes?

Scenic view of illuminated mountains against sky at night, with lava flows and lightning.Image source, Getty Images

Volcanic lightning is one of nature's most spectacular sights and now researchers are discovering more about why it happens.

When a volcano erupts it creates a plume of hot volcanic ash, gas, rock and water vapour that is tightly packed together.

As it falls, tiny particles gain friction - some picking up a positive charge and others a negative charge - with lightning strikes taking place when a huge electrical spark flows between the two.

But now physicists think they understand more about how these different charges come about.

Scientists had wondered how a volcanic plume could pick up a charge, as particles of these kinds of materials wouldn't typically do this.

Now a study has shown that it's due to a fine layer of carbon covering the molecules, this allows the charge to be transferred when collisions take place.

The heat and upward-moving current of gas in a volcanic plume create conditions that are good for this.

The new research has been published by the Institute of Science and Technology Austria in the science journal Nature.