13 research outputs found

    Policy opportunities

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    Recommendations are given regarding National Science Foundation (NSF) astronomy programs and the NASA Space Astrophysics program. The role of ground based astronomy is reviewed. The role of National Optical Astronomy Observatories (NOAO) in ground-based night-time astronomical research is discussed. An enhanced Explored Program, costs and management of small and moderate space programs, the role of astrophysics within NASA's space exploration initiative, suborbital and airborne astronomical research, the problems of the Hubble Space Telescope, and astronomy education are discussed. Also covered are policy issues related to the role of science advisory committees, international cooperation and competition, archiving and distribution of astronomical data, and multi-wavelength observations of variable sources

    Physical Structure of a Coronal Streamer in the Closed-Field Region as Observed from UVCS/SOHO and SXT/Yohkoh

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    We analyze a coronal helmet streamer observed on 1996 July 25 using instruments aboard two solar spacecraft, the Ultraviolet Coronagraph Spectrometer (UVCS) on board Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXT) on board Yohkoh. We derive temperatures and electron densities at 1.15 R☉ from SXT/Yohkoh observations. At this height, the streamer temperature is about log T (K) = 6.28 ± 0.05, and the electron density is about log ne(cm-3) = 8.09 ± 0.26, while at 1.5 R☉ a temperature of log T (K) = 6.2 and a density of log ne(cm-3) = 7.1 are obtained by UVCS/SOHO. Within the measurement uncertainty this suggests a constant temperature from the base of the streamer to 1.5 R☉. Electron density measurements suggest that the gas in the streamer core is close to hydrostatic equilibrium. Comparison with potential field models for the magnetic field suggests a plasma β larger than 1 in the closed-field region in the streamer. In deriving electron densities and temperatures from the SXT/Yohkoh data, we include the effects of abundance anomalies on the SXT filter response. We use the elemental abundances derived from the UVCS/SOHO observations to estimate the first ionization potential and gravitational settling effects. We then give the set of abundances for the solar corona, which agrees with our observations. In addition, we analyzed the SXT data from 6 consecutive days. We found that from 1996 July 22 to July 27, the physical properties of the streamer are nearly constant. We conclude that we may be observing the same loop system over 6 days

    Recalibration of the Soft X-Ray Telescope Onboard Yohkoh

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    YOHKOH SXT FULL-RESOLUTION OBSERVATIONS OF SIGMOIDS: STRUCTURE, FORMATION, AND ERUPTION

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    We study the structure of 107 bright sigmoids using full-resolution (2.5 � pixels) images from the Yohkoh Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXT) obtained between 1991 December and 2001 December. We find that none of these sigmoids are made of single loops of S or inverse-S shape; all comprise a pattern of multiple loops. We also find that all S-shaped sigmoids are made of right-bearing loops and all inverse-S–shaped sigmoids of left-bearing loops, without exception. We co-align the SXT images with Kitt Peak magnetograms to determine the magnetic field directions in each sigmoid. We use a potential-field source surface model to determine the direction of the overlying magnetic field. We find that sigmoids for which the relative orientation of these two fields has a parallel component outnumber antiparallel ones by more than an order of magnitude. We find that the number of sigmoids per active region varies with the solar cycle in a manner that is consistent with this finding. Finally, those few sigmoids that are antiparallel erupt roughly twice as often as those that are parallel. We briefly discuss the implications of these results in terms of formation and eruption mechanisms of flux tubes and sigmoids

    Yohkoh

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