Abstract
AbstractOne of the most enigmatic types of sprites is the dancing sprite which appears to dance above the storm as sequential luminous emissions a few 100 ms or less apart. Dancing sprites occur in relatively small proportion and many aspects of their generation remain unknown. We present a multi‐instrumental analysis of a 20‐hr duration Mesoscale Convective System (MCS) over the northwestern Mediterranean Sea on September 21, 2019, that produced 21 sprites recorded with a video camera, of which 19 (90) were dancing sprites. The asymmetric trailing stratiform MCS developed in strong convective conditions having a CAPE of 3,500 J . It formed several convective cores (up to 2,900 with cloud top temperature −C) and exhibited a bow echo structure during the sprite production period. Using Lightning Mapping Array data, we show that the sprite producing positive cloud‐to‐ground (SP + CG) flashes mainly initiated at the edge of the convective line on the side of the stratiform region. The flashes propagated 100–200 km across it, producing both positive and negative CG strokes. The 19 dancing sprite events included 49 sequences, of which 46 were associated with distinct SP + CG strokes and 3 with surges during the continuing current. An especially bright and wide sprite sequence was produced by three distinct SP + CG strokes that occurred within 3 ms and spread over 54 km. This sprite sequence could be classified as a new sprite category resembling a "wall" but structured in three groups, each associated with one of the +CG strokes.
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