cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/5039587
Earthquake lights can take several different forms, according to a chapter on the phenomenon coauthored by Derr and published in the 2019 edition of the Encyclopedia of Solid Earth Geophysics.
Sometimes, the lights may appear similar to ordinary lightning, or they may be like a luminous band in the atmosphere akin to polar aurora. Other times they resemble glowing spheres floating midair. They may also look like small flames flickering or creeping along or near the ground or larger flames emerging from the ground.
Yes I read an interesting paper on this kind of thing and spoke to the author (Freund even rings a bell) and he reckoned it could be a process that would lead to the release of electrical charge into the atmosphere.
Of course, the tricky thing is eliminating more conventional explanations like electrical lines going down and substations exploding but, as they say in the piece, there’s now a lot more data available which should lead to higher quality analysis.