Review of recent results on streamer discharges and discussion of their relevance for sprites and lightning
Ute Ebert, Sander Nijdam, Chao Li, Alejandro Luque, Tanja Briels,, Eddie van Veldhuizen

TL;DR
This review synthesizes recent experimental and theoretical findings on streamer discharges, emphasizing their relevance to understanding sprites and lightning phenomena in the atmosphere, based on Townsend scaling and recent observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent streamer research and discusses their implications for sprite physics, highlighting new experimental data and theoretical insights.
Findings
Streamer diameters and velocities vary widely
3D morphology includes branching and reconnection
Electron energies influence chemical and radiation processes
Abstract
It is by now well understood that large sprite discharges at the low air densities of the mesosphere are physically similar to small streamer discharges in air at standard temperature and pressure. This similarity is based on Townsend scaling with air density. First the theoretical basis of Townsend scaling and a list of six possible corrections to scaling are discussed; then the experimental evidence for the similarity between streamers and sprites is reviewed. We then discuss how far present sprite and streamer theory has been developed, and we show how streamer experiments can be interpreted as sprite simulations. We review those results of recent streamer research that are relevant for sprites and other forms of atmospheric electricity and discuss their implications for sprite understanding. These include the large range of streamer diameters and velocities and the overall 3D…
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