NIST Webbook has some spectral information for molecules, although most of it is Ro-Vib. E.g., here is a page on oxygen.
https://webbook.nist.gov/cgi/cbook.cgi?ID=C7782447&Units=SI&Mask=1000#DiatomicMolecular emission data may have to be sleuthed individually. I'm not aware of any convenient, comprehensive tables freely available on the internet. Molecular emission is typically weak because of competitive dissociation and resultant atomic emission due to high energies of excitation. E.g., discharge into oxygen gas creates mostly emission from dissociated and excited oxygen atoms and ions. Molecular oxygen has a well-known emission from singlet state at around 760 nm (b
1Σ
g+) I think and another line at around 1.2-1.3 μm (a
1Δ
g) (Jeong et al, J. Phys. Chem. A 2000, 104, 8027). But this kind of information for different molecules may be difficult to find without access to primary literature.
I don't have my CRC handy to check what kind of tabulated information is provided in it.