Now, in glow corona, we don't have much plasma, just a small "avalanche region" close to the "sharp" electrode, with a relative trickle of heavy ion carries completing the circuit through the bulk of the gas. Not very energetic.
Get into full blown arc mode, though, and it's Katie bar the door. That can get very energetic indeed.
There's an interesting "women in science" angle to arcs. A Brit woman named Hertha Ayrton did extensive experimentation with arcs back in the late 19th century, published in "The Electrician" (the dude in my avatar published in there a lot

)and derived an empirical arc equation known as Ayrton's equation. The motivation was arc lighting, IIRC. I forget how it went, but her husband was a physicist and electrical engineer and that's how she got started with this. For her work, she became the first ever female member of the Brit IEE, the Brit national version of the IEEE at the time.
She compared arcs to mules (and maybe even men

), stubborn with a mind of their own.
Her equation relates the voltage across an arc to the length and current, amongst other things, and goes something like this. I'm quoting this from memory, so don't hold me to it exactly, but it looks right:
V = A + B*d + C/I
Where 'd' is the length of the arc. This applies to steady state, well behaved arcs. "Turbulent" arcs will deviate from this. There are other empircal formulas derived since, but Ayrton's works pretty well for most.
'A' is a constant, indepedent of length, which depends mainly on the properties (and shape, actually) of the electrodes, which would include the work function and all that good stuff. IIRC, this value is around 30V for copper rod electrodes.
B is a length constant, and it depends on the pressure of the gas primarily (as well as other gas properties). B *increases* with pressure. C is the inverse current, negative differential resistance coefficient (and I believe it includes a 'd' term itself, dependent on length, but I can't remember that part).
The C part looks like "constant power", but that tends to be misleading. This term is responsible for the runaway behavior of arcs.
So, to maintain an arc, we've got to have some minimum voltage, 'A' to sustain it. Drop our voltage below that and it dies no matter what the other variables are. We've got another term that increases linearly with length. Double the length, double the additional voltage above A. And the more pressure, the more voltage per length.
Now, what does this tell us. A high pressure arc, for a given current, takes more voltage drop to maintain, and by VI, is going to be more energetic that a low pressure arc.
The third term is the runaway term. As I mentioned, the functional form can be misleading at first blush, but it is indeed a runaway term. Get a current started, and without some series current limiting device, the current tends to increase without limit. Solve a simple DC circuit with a resistor in series with a term like that, then let R go to zero, and you'll see what I mean.
The result is basically that once we get an arc started, we've got a monster on our hands that tends to suck all available power from our source. Now, the higher the pressure, the worse that monster will be (if we've got the voltage available).
A low pressure arc can be a dainty, well behaved and civilized thing, not drawing too much power. Fluoresecent tubes are example of this. And yes, the are full blown arcs, but low pressure arcs. The gas inside is at relatively low pressure, the power is relatively low. Arc stability is a while 'nother complicated kettle of fish, but it depends on the size of the arc and the shape of the electrodes. When fluorescent electrodes are near the end of their life, the electrodes get pitted and worn, and stability is sometimes lost. That's that swirling, flickering, and jumping you see.
That's a "turbulent" arc. The mechanical stresses of that turbulence, along with little pieces of electrode flying off can break the seal, let air pressure in, and the tube goes out. THere's nowhere enough voltage and available power to run an arc in full atmosphere. And if there was, it would be too strong, that monster I was talking about. That happenned out in my shop just the other day. I noticed one of the 8' tubes started flickering, got a nasty swirl in it, and started making a popping noise. Then it went out with a "squeeeeeee" sound as air rushed in through a little pin hole made by the jerking on the electrodes.
The low pressure arc is not all that hot. Now, the free electrons in there would be at very high temperature indeed, but the majority of the mass, and thus the total heat capacity in the ions and rest isn't all that hot at all. You can touch the tubes are they're just warm to the touch most of the time. In hot weather, they'll feel a little hot, but it's nothing like an incandescent bulb.
HID (high intensity discharge) lightning of various types use higher pressure arcs to get more output, and they do get fairly hot. But fluorescents are very mild and civilized arcs.
-Richard