At first the terms
elves and sprites implies a certain almost mythic note. They are an electrical discharge
associated with thunderstorms but normally above them as opposed to what most people see
from underneath a thunderstorm. They are best observed from beyond the earth.
Elves often appear as a dim, flattened, expanding glow around 250
miles in diameter that lasts for typically one millisecond. They occur in the ionosphere
60 miles above the ground over thunderstorms. Elves is an acronym for Global Warming of Light
and Very Low Frequency Perturbations from Electromagnetic Pulse Sources.
Sprites are large scale electrical discharges which occur high above
a thunderstorm cloud, giving rise to a varied range of visual shapes. The phenomena were
named after the mischievous sprite (air spirit) Puck in William Shakespeare's A
Midsummer Night's Dream. They normally are colored reddish orange or greenish blue, with
hanging tendrils below. They often occur in clusters above the Earth's surface. Sprites
have sometimes been held responsible for otherwise unexplained accidents involving high
altitude aircraft flying above thunderstorms.
A team of Spanish
researchers has made a recent high speed recording of elves and sprites in storms,
fleeting and luminous electric phenomena produced in the upper layers of the atmosphere.
Their analysis of these observations has been published in the Journal of Geophysical
Research.
The results show there are many fewer elves in storms that
form over land than those at sea, apparently due to winter storms having greater energy.
The scientists also observed the interaction between two sprites. A branch of one of
them hit and bounced off the second, giving clues about their dynamics and electric
structure.
These elves and sprites are illustrative of the many
phenomena that are not clearly known because of their relative rarity and
briefness.