15 research outputs found
The multifrequency Siberian Radioheliograph
The 10-antenna prototype of the multifrequency Siberian radioheliograph is
described. The prototype consists of four parts: antennas with broadband
front-ends, analog back-ends, digital receivers and a correlator. The prototype
antennas are mounted on the outermost stations of the Siberian Solar Radio
Telescope (SSRT) array. A signal from each antenna is transmitted to a workroom
by an analog fiber optical link, laid in an underground tunnel. After mixing,
all signals are digitized and processed by digital receivers before the data
are transmitted to the correlator. The digital receivers and the correlator are
accessible by the LAN. The frequency range of the prototype is from 4 to 8 GHz.
Currently the frequency switching observing mode is used. The prototype data
include both circular polarizations at a number of frequencies given by a list.
This prototype is the first stage of the multifrequency Siberian
radioheliograph development. It is assumed that the radioheliograph will
consist of 96 antennas and will occupy stations of the West-East-South subarray
of the SSRT. The radioheliograph will be fully constructed in autumn of 2012.
We plan to reach the brightness temperature sensitivity about 100 K for the
snapshot image, a spatial resolution up to 13 arcseconds at 8 GHz and
polarization measurement accuracy about a few percent.
First results with the 10-antenna prototype are presented of observations of
solar microwave bursts. The prototype abilities to estimate source size and
locations at different frequencies are discussed
Thermal to Nonthermal Energy Partition at the Early Rise Phase of Solar Flares
In some flares the thermal component appears much earlier than the nonthermal
component in X-ray range. Using sensitive microwave observations we revisit
this finding made by Battaglia et al. (2009) based on RHESSI data analysis. We
have found that nonthermal microwave emission produced by accelerated electrons
with energy of at least several hundred keV, appears as early as the thermal
soft X-ray emission indicative that the electron acceleration takes place at
the very early flare phase. The non-detection of the hard X-rays at that early
stage of the flares is, thus, an artifact of a limited RHESSI sensitivity. In
all considered events, the microwave emission intensity increases at the early
flare phase. We found that either thermal or nonthermal gyrosynchrotron
emission can dominate the low-frequency part of the microwave spectrum below
the spectral peak occurring at 3-10 GHz. In contrast, the high-frequency
optically thin part of the spectrum is always formed by the nonthermal,
accelerated electron component, whose power-law energy spectrum can extend up
to a few MeV at this early flare stage. This means that even though the total
number of accelerated electrons is small at this stage, their nonthermal
spectrum is fully developed. This implies that an acceleration process of
available seed particles is fully operational. While, creation of this seed
population (the process commonly called `injection' of the particles from the
thermal pool into acceleration) has a rather low efficiency at this stage,
although, the plasma heating efficiency is high. This imbalance between the
heating and acceleration (in favor of the heating) is difficult to reconcile
within most of available flare energization models. Being reminiscent of the
tradeoff between the Joule heating and runaway electron acceleration, it puts
additional constraints on the electron injection into the acceleration process.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, accepted for Ap
Radioheliograph observations of microwave bursts with zebra structures
The so-called zebra structures in radio dynamic spectra, specifically their
frequencies and frequency drifts of emission stripes, contain information on
the plasma parameters in the coronal part of flare loops. This paper presents
observations of zebra structures in a microwave range. Dynamic spectra were
recorded by Chinese spectro-polarimeters in the frequency band close to the
working frequencies of the Siberian Solar Radio Telescope. The emission sources
are localized in the flare regions, and we are able to estimate the plasma
parameters in the generation sites using X-ray data. The interpretation of the
zebra structures in terms of the existing theories is discussed. The conclusion
has been arrived that the preferred generation mechanism of zebra structures in
the microwave range is the conversion of plasma waves to electromagnetic
emission on the double plasma resonance surfaces distributed across a flare
loop.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Study of flare energy release using events with numerous type III-like bursts in microwaves
The analysis of narrowband drifting of type III-like structures in radio
bursts dynamic spectra allows to obtain unique information about primary energy
release mechanisms in solar flares. The SSRT spatially resolved images and a
high spectral and temporal resolution allow direct determination not only the
positions of its sources but also the exciter velocities along the flare loop.
Practically, such measurements are possible during some special time intervals
when the SSRT (about 5.7 GHz) is observing the flare region in two high-order
fringes; thus, two 1D scans are recorded simultaneously at two frequency bands.
The analysis of type III-like bursts recorded during the flare 14 Apr 2002 is
presented. Using-muliwavelength radio observations recorded by SSRT, SBRS,
NoRP, RSTN we study an event with series of several tens of drifting microwave
pulses with drift rates in the range from -7 to 13 GHz/s. The sources of the
fast-drifting bursts were located near the top of the flare loop in a volume of
a few Mm in size. The slow drift of the exciters along the flare loop suggests
a high pitch-anisotropy of the emitting electrons.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, Solar Physics, in press, 201
The microwave subsecond pulse of September 17, 2001: The spectrum, location and size of the source
We examine simultaneous observations of microwave subsecond
pulses with high temporal, spatial and spectral resolution from
the Siberian Solar Radio Telescope (5.7 GHz, 14 ms resolution) and
from the spectropolarimeters (5.2–7.6 GHz, 6 ms) of the
National Astronomical Observatories. The September 17, 2001 flare
is discussed in detail. The subsecond pulse (SSP) was observed in
the initial phase of the flare, and its HWFH duration was 40 ms.
The pulse was accompanied by a rapid change of the dynamic
spectrum whose width was about 1%, and the degree of
polarization made up 35%. The time profile at the SSRT
frequency depends substantially on the SSP's spectral features.
The SSP was observed by both the NS (North-South) and EW
(East-West) arms (in two interference orders in the latter case).
SSP sources locations in burst structures were determined. We also
find that the source was not a point-like one, but its apparent
size was about the beam width (15 arcsec) for the NS scanning
direction. In the EW direction the SSP was less than 10 arcsec
in size