by Ann » Mon Oct 02, 2023 8:52 am
RocketRon wrote: ↑Mon Oct 02, 2023 6:01 am
Lotsa legs there !!
Back to sprites.
And the red colouring is symptomatic/indicative of - what ???
Well, flashes of lightning are hot. According to
this site, lightning can be as hot as 30,000°C (54,000°F). Such a temperature means that the flash is technically blue (or blue-white), although it is typically so overexposed that we see it as white.
Red sprites are much colder:
www.swc.nd.gov wrote:
Thunderstorms produce lightning, which is a release of static electricity between positive and negative charges in the atmosphere. This discharge is extremely hot, (approximately 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit) roughly five times greater than the temperature of the sun. Occasionally, during positive or cloud to ground lightning strokes, another discharge of energy can take place above the thunderstorm and stretch into the upper reaches of earth’s atmosphere. This is called a red sprite. In comparison to lightning, red sprites are actually quite cold and their color is thought to result from charged particles interacting with nitrogen.
Ann
[quote=RocketRon post_id=334136 time=1696226498]
Lotsa legs there !!
Back to sprites.
And the red colouring is symptomatic/indicative of - what ???
[/quote]
Well, flashes of lightning are hot. According to [url=https://www.noaa.gov/jetstream/lightning/sound-of-thunder]this site[/url], lightning can be as hot as 30,000°C (54,000°F). Such a temperature means that the flash is technically blue (or blue-white), although it is typically so overexposed that we see it as white.
Red sprites are much colder:
[quote][url=https://www.swc.nd.gov/arb/news/atmospheric_reservoir/pdfs/2013_10%20-%20Red%20Sprites.pdf]www.swc.nd.gov[/url] wrote:
Thunderstorms produce lightning, which is a release of static electricity between positive and negative charges in the atmosphere. This discharge is extremely hot, (approximately 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit) roughly five times greater than the temperature of the sun. Occasionally, during positive or cloud to ground lightning strokes, another discharge of energy can take place above the thunderstorm and stretch into the upper reaches of earth’s atmosphere. This is called a red sprite. In comparison to lightning, red sprites are actually quite cold and their color is thought to result from charged particles interacting with nitrogen.[/quote]
Ann