Secret Sprites: Study Explains High-altitude Flashes

Sprites over thunderstorms in Kansas on August 10, 2000, observed in the mesosphere, with an altitude of 50-90 kilometers as a response to powerful lightning discharges from tropospheric thunderstorms. The true color of sprites is pink-red.
(Image credit: Walter Lyons, FMA Research, Fort Collins, Colorado)

Lightning-inspired emissions dance high above thunderstorms and produce some of the most spectacular light shows nature has to offer.

The sprites, as they are known, rise as high as 50 miles into the atmosphere and last only milliseconds, so they are very difficult to study. Pilots who first spotted them were thought crazy by scientists who had never seen them. They were confirmed in 1989 when spotted from a space shuttle.

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Bjorn Carey is the science information officer at Stanford University. He has written and edited for various news outlets, including Live Science's Life's Little Mysteries, Space.com and Popular Science. When it comes to reporting on and explaining wacky science and weird news, Bjorn is your guy. He currently lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his beautiful son and wife.