Can you check this for sure. From what I understand is that clouds are basically accumulated droplets of water. They have no actual solid surface that could "collide" with another cloud. It would be like colliding two handfuls of suds from your dish water.
All thunder is from lightning... It's just that we do not always see the flash.
As someone already stated, lightning burns the air and causes rapid expansion of the gasses. This is the cause.
Heat lightning, dry lightning, fork lightning, sheet lightning, chain lightning... all different ways that the static charges are released and what source and destination of the movement of the electron imbalance takes as a path.
Either way... it is one of the most visible and tangible examples of how powerful God is... It is one of my favorite things to watch and enjoy.
All thunder is the result of lightning. It's the result of the super-heated air expanding at incredibly high rates of speed. You can read about it at the link I provided later in this post.
A similar thing is experienced when we clap our hands. The sound we hear is the result of the air between our hands being rapidly compressed and not from the skin colliding. To prove this point, try just clapping the heals of your hands together and you'll notice very little sound. When you clap the palms together, the shape of your hands are slightly cupped so air get trapped and compressed and the harder you clap the louder the sound as the compression happens at higher rates of speed.
No, I have never seen lightning that reaches the ground start in the sky. The only time I've actually seen it strike was when I was looking at the ground first. Quite bright at the ground, and sudden. Then moving up slower from there. (Which is a sample size of maybe .0000001% of lightning strikes, or less)
You are familiar with an 8-segment display like the image below. When a number is displayed, such as a number 6, not all parts are lit up simultaneously. Each segment is lit up in a sequence. For example, it might start with the top cross bar, then the left upper vertical followed by the left lower vertical, bottom cross bar, right lower vertical, and then center cross bar. This sequence takes place so fast that our eyes and brain are unable to detect each one independently so we see what appears to be all parts lit up at once.
Another example. Ever notice that when you look at a wheel turning, it appears to be going backwards when the vehicle was actually moving forward? This is especially noticeable with a video of a wheel. The reason for this is in how our eyes and brains process the information coming in. The wheel is spinning too fast for our eyes and brains to see it and process it in real time. Instead, our eyes and brain might capture a spoke at a particular point in its rotation and with each capture being slightly advanced or retarded in position from the previous one. If advanced or earlier in the rotation then it appears to be moving in reverse and if retarded or later in rotation the wheel will appear to be moving forward.
A lightning strike or any electrical discharge for that matter, happens in much the same way. The bolt of lightning is actually a series of short jumps that happen too fast for our eyes and brains to process in real time. What we see is actually something after the fact and what looks like a strike from ground up could actually be the reverse because it happens so fast that our brain is not able to process it in real time.
Assuming more accepted electron theory (there are some that still hold to the conventional flow theory or hole theory), all electrical strikes are the result of electrons traveling from a highly negative charged area (excessive electrons) to a highly positive charged area (lacking electrons). In most cases but not all, when lightning strikes between clouds and the earth, it is usually the result of electrons flowing from clouds to the earth but our eyes and brains may see it and process it in reverse.
Here's an explanation that I found online at the
National Severe Storms Laboratory website. Hope this makes sense.
Does lightning strike from the sky down, or the ground up?
The answer is both. Cloud-to-ground lightning comes from the sky down, but the part you see comes from the ground up. A typical cloud-to-ground flash lowers a path of negative electricity (that we cannot see) towards the ground in a series of spurts. Objects on the ground generally have a positive charge. Since opposites attract, an upward streamer is sent out from the object about to be struck. When these two paths meet, a return stroke zips back up to the sky. It is the return stroke that produces the visible flash, but it all happens so fast - in about one-millionth of a second - so the human eye doesn't see the actual formation of the stroke.