Abstract
Spectra of small-scale sprite structures, downward and upward
propagating streamers, glow, and beads, were recorded with a slit-less
spectrograph at 10,000 frames per second (fps) from aircraft missions in
2009 and 2013. The spectra are dominated by emissions from molecular
nitrogen, the 1 positive band in the red, and in the blue the 2 positive
band plus the 1 negative band of molecular nitrogen ions. The excitation
threshold for the blue emissions is higher than for the red emissions so
the blue/red ratio can, in principle, be used as a proxy for the
electron energy leading to the emissions. We extracted for analysis time
series of spectra from 11 sprites: 18 time series from downwards
propagating streamers, 6 from upward propagating streamers, 14 from glow
and 12 from beads. The total number of spectra in the 50 time series is
953. Blue emissions are almost exclusively associated with streamers
indicating the more energetic nature of streamers compared with glow and
beads. Both downward and upward propagating streamers start and end with
low blue emissions indicating time variations in the associated
processes. Because the red and blue nitrogen emissions are significantly
affected by quenching, which is altitude dependent, and we do not have
sufficiently accurate altitudes, the observed spectral blue/red ratios
cannot be directly applied to sprite models.