28 research outputs found
Radio Bursts Associated with Flare and Ejecta in the 13 July 2004 Event
We investigate coronal transients associated with a GOES M6.7 class flare and
a coronal mass ejection (CME) on 13 July 2004. During the rising phase of the
flare, a filament eruption, loop expansion, a Moreton wave, and an ejecta were
observed. An EIT wave was detected later on. The main features in the radio
dynamic spectrum were a frequency-drifting continuum and two type II bursts.
Our analysis shows that if the first type II burst was formed in the low
corona, the burst heights and speed are close to the projected distances and
speed of the Moreton wave (a chromospheric shock wave signature). The
frequency-drifting radio continuum, starting above 1 GHz, was formed almost two
minutes prior to any shock features becoming visible, and a fast-expanding
piston (visible as the continuum) could have launched another shock wave. A
possible scenario is that a flare blast overtook the earlier transient, and
ignited the first type II burst. The second type II burst may have been formed
by the same shock, but only if the shock was propagating at a constant speed.
This interpretation also requires that the shock-producing regions were located
at different parts of the propagating structure, or that the shock was passing
through regions with highly different atmospheric densities. This complex
event, with a multitude of radio features and transients at other wavelengths,
presents evidence for both blast-wave-related and CME-related radio emissions.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures; Solar Physics Topical Issue, in pres
Collisional and Radiative Processes in Optically Thin Plasmas
Most of our knowledge of the physical processes in distant plasmas is obtained
through measurement of the radiation they produce. Here we provide an overview of the
main collisional and radiative processes and examples of diagnostics relevant to the microphysical
processes in the plasma. Many analyses assume a time-steady plasma with ion
populations in equilibrium with the local temperature and Maxwellian distributions of particle
velocities, but these assumptions are easily violated in many cases. We consider these
departures from equilibrium and possible diagnostics in detail
TRICE 2 Observations of Low-Energy Magnetospheric Ions Within the Cusp
On December 08, 2018 the Twin Rocket Investigation of Cusp Electrodynamics 2 (TRICE 2) mission was successfully launched. The mission consisted of two sounding rockets, each carrying a payload capable of measuring electron and ion distributions, electric and magnetic fields, and plasma waves occurring in the northern magnetospheric cusp. This study highlights the ion and wave observations obtained by TRICE 2 in the cusp and observations from the magnetospheric multiscale (MMS) spacecraft at the low-latitude magnetopause two hours prior to the TRICE 2 traversal of the cusp. Within the cusp, typical ion cusp features were observed, that is, energy-latitude dispersion of injected magnetosheath plasma. However, a lower energy population was also measured near the equatorward edge of the cusp on open field lines. Pitch-angle distributions of the low-energy ions suggest that this population was magnetospheric in origin, and not from ionospheric upflows. Data from MMS show that counterstreaming ions were present in the outer magnetosphere and low-latitude boundary layer at similar energies to those observed by TRICE 2 in the cusp. Correlations between the low-energy ions within the cusp and broadband extremely low frequency waves suggest that the low-energy magnetospheric ions that filled the flux tube may have undergone wave-particle interactions. These interactions may cause pitch-angle scattering of low-energy magnetospheric ions closer to the loss cone, thereby allowing them to precipitate into the cusp and be measured by the TRICE 2 sounding rockets
High Spectral Resolution Observation of Decimetric Radio Spikes Emitted by Solar Flares – First Results of the Phoenix-3 Spectrometer
A new multichannel spectrometer, Phoenix-3, is in operation having
capabilities to observe solar flare radio emissions in the 0.1 - 5 GHz range at
an unprecedented spectral resolution of 61.0 kHz with high sensitivity. The
present setup for routine observations allows measuring circular polarization,
but requires a data compression to 4096 frequency channels in the 1 - 5 GHz
range and to a temporal resolution of 200 ms. First results are presented by
means of a well observed event that included narrowband spikes at 350 - 850
MHz. Spike bandwidths are found to have a power-law distribution, dropping off
below a value of 2 MHz for full width at half maximum (FWHM). The narrowest
spikes have a FWHM bandwidth less than 0.3 MHz or 0.04% of the central
frequency. The smallest half-power increase occurs within 0.104 MHz at 443.5
MHz, which is close to the predicted natural width of maser emission. The
spectrum of spikes is found to be asymmetric, having an enhanced low-frequency
tail. The distribution of the total spike flux is approximately an exponential.Comment: Solar Physics, in pres