326 research outputs found
Electronics implementation of the solar neutron experiment
The electronic equipment design and function are discussed for the solar neutron counter experiment. Circuit diagrams are included
Spectral and spatial properties of solar microflares
Solar microflares are studied using both hard ( 28 keV) and soft (3.5 to 8.0 keV) X-ray observations. The soft X-ray events have durations 3 m at 0.1x maximum intensity, and typically have similar rise and decay times. The fastest decay observed was 15 s (1/e). Soft and hard X-ray intensities are uncorrelated. The events are very compact, consistent with a projected area approximately 8 x 8 inches. They are normally not associated with H alpha or type 3 emissions and their time profiles suggest a thermal origin at the top of the chromosphere. If the primary energy release site is in the corona, an energy transfer agent consistent with the observations is a non-thermal proton beam
Fast fluctuations of soft X-rays from active regions
A selection of short lived small soft X-ray bursts is studied using data from the Hard X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (HXIS), and the results are compared with the data from the Hard X-Ray Burst Spectrometer (HXRBS) with a view to understanding conditions at the onset of flares. Short-lived events provide an opportunity to study the radiation from the primary energy transfer process without confusion from the slowly-varying thermal X-ray emission which characterizes the decay of a large flare. The fast decay of the soft X-rays, only a few tens of seconds, suggests that they occur in the dense chromosphere. The results indicate that the short events may be signatures of several different phenomena, depending on their characteristics. Some events occur in association with reverse-drift type III bursts and simultaneous flaring elsewhere on the Sun, thus suggesting dumping of particles accelerated at a remote site. Some events have hard X-ray bursts and normal type III bursts associated with them, while others have neither. The latter events place strong constraints on the nonthermal electron population present
A large area detector for neutrons between 2 and 100 MeV
A neutron detector sensitive from 2 to 100 MeV is described. The detector is designed for high altitude balloon flight to measure the flux, energy and direction of albedo neutrons from the earth and to search for solar neutrons. A neutron scatter from a proton is required in each of two liquid scintillator tanks spaced 1 meter apart. The energy of the recoil proton in the first tank is obtained from pulse height analysis of the scintillator output. The energy of the recoil neutron is obtained from its time of flight between the tanks. The detector has been calibrated with 15.3 MeV neutrons and mu mesons. The minimum detectable flux is 10(-4) neutron/sq cm/sec at a counting rate of one per minute; the energy resolution is 12% at 15 MeV and 30% at 100 MeV. The angle between the incoming neutron and the recoil neutron is measured to + or - 10 deg
Australian audit reports: 1996-2003
In 1996 Australia revised audit reporting standard AUS 702 to align with many of the concepts in the international audit reporting standard ISA 700. These included preventing auditors issuing a “subject to” qualified opinion, and permitting auditors to modify the audit report in specific circumstances by including an emphasis of matter (EoM) paragraph. This research examines the frequency with which different types of opinions are issued and the circumstances giving rise to the inclusion of an EoM paragraph, and compares the types of opinions issued by the major audit firms and for the various industry sectors over the period 1996-2003. © 2006 CPA Australia
Flare energetics
In this investigation of flare energetics, researchers sought to establish a comprehensive and self-consistent picture of the sources and transport of energy within a flare. To achieve this goal, they chose five flares in 1980 that were well observed with instruments on the Solar Maximum Mission, and with other space-borne and ground-based instruments. The events were chosen to represent various types of flares. Details of the observations available for them and the corresponding physical parameters derived from these data are presented. The flares were studied from two perspectives, the impulsive and gradual phases, and then the results were compared to obtain the overall picture of the energics of these flares. The role that modeling can play in estimating the total energy of a flare when the observationally determined parameters are used as the input to a numerical model is discussed. Finally, a critique of the current understanding of flare energetics and the methods used to determine various energetics terms is outlined, and possible future directions of research in this area are suggested
Rebuilding trust and the role of audit: The impact of the UK audit reform proposals on other standard-setters
Unique Observations of a Geomagnetic SI^+ -- SI^- Pair: Solar Sources and Associated Solar Wind Fluctuations
The paper describes the occurrence of a pair of oppositely directed sudden
impulses (SI), in the geomagnetic field (X), at ground stations, called
SI -- SI pairs, that occurred between 1835 UT and 2300 UT on 23
April 1998. The SI -- SI pair, was closely correlated with
corresponding variations in the solar wind density, while solar wind velocity
and the southward component of the interplanetary magnetic field (Bz) did not
show any correspondence. Further, this event had no source on the visible solar
disk. However, a rear-side partial halo coronal mass ejection (CME) and an M1.4
class solar flare behind the west limb, took place on 20 April 1998, the date
corresponding to the traceback location of the solar wind flows. This event
presents empirical evidence, which to our knowledge, is the best convincing
evidence for the association of specific solar events to the observations of an
SI -- SI pair. In addition, it shows that it is possible for a
rear side solar flare to propagate a shock towards the earth.Comment: The paper has just been accepted in the Journal of Geophysical
Research (Space Physics) on 20 September 2010. It is 17 pages with 4 figure
A synoptic view of solar transient evolution in the inner heliosphere using the Heliospheric Imagers on STEREO
By exploiting data from the STEREO/heliospheric imagers (HI) we extend a well-established technique developed for coronal analysis by producing time-elongation plots that reveal the nature of solar transient activity over a far more extensive region of the heliosphere than previously possible from coronagraph images. Despite the simplicity of these plots, their power in demonstrating how the plethora of ascending coronal features observed near the Sun evolve as they move antisunward is obvious. The time-elongation profile of a transient tracked by HI can, moreover, be used to establish its angle out of the plane-of-the-sky; an illustration of such analysis reveals coronal mass ejection material that can be clearly observed propagating out to distances beyond 1AU. This work confirms the value of the time-elongation format in identifying/characterising transient activity in the inner heliosphere, whilst also validating the ability of HI to continuously monitor solar ejecta out to and beyond 1A
Survey on solar X-ray flares and associated coherent radio emissions
The radio emission during 201 X-ray selected solar flares was surveyed from
100 MHz to 4 GHz with the Phoenix-2 spectrometer of ETH Zurich. The selection
includes all RHESSI flares larger than C5.0 jointly observed from launch until
June 30, 2003. Detailed association rates of radio emission during X-ray flares
are reported. In the decimeter wavelength range, type III bursts and the
genuinely decimetric emissions (pulsations, continua, and narrowband spikes)
were found equally frequently. Both occur predominantly in the peak phase of
hard X-ray (HXR) emission, but are less in tune with HXRs than the
high-frequency continuum exceeding 4 GHz, attributed to gyrosynchrotron
radiation. In 10% of the HXR flares, an intense radiation of the above genuine
decimetric types followed in the decay phase or later. Classic meter-wave type
III bursts are associated in 33% of all HXR flares, but only in 4% they are the
exclusive radio emission. Noise storms were the only radio emission in 5% of
the HXR flares, some of them with extended duration. Despite the spatial
association (same active region), the noise storm variations are found to be
only loosely correlated in time with the X-ray flux. In a surprising 17% of the
HXR flares, no coherent radio emission was found in the extremely broad band
surveyed. The association but loose correlation between HXR and coherent radio
emission is interpreted by multiple reconnection sites connected by common
field lines.Comment: Solar Physics, in pres
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