High Temporal and Spectral Resolution Interferometric Observations of Unusual Solar Radio Bursts

We report very high temporal and spectral resolution interferometric observations of some unusual solar radio bursts near 1420 MHz. These bursts were observed on 13 September 2005, 22 minutes after the peak of a GOES class X flare from the NOAA region 10808. Our observations show 11 episodes of n...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oberoi, Divya, Evarts, Eric R., Rogers, Alan E. E.
Other Authors: Haystack Observatory
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Springer 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/65384
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1941-7458
Description
Summary:We report very high temporal and spectral resolution interferometric observations of some unusual solar radio bursts near 1420 MHz. These bursts were observed on 13 September 2005, 22 minutes after the peak of a GOES class X flare from the NOAA region 10808. Our observations show 11 episodes of narrow-band intermittent emission within a span of ≈8 s. Each episode shows a heavily frequency-modulated band of emission with a spectral slope of about −245.5 MHz s−1 [s superscript -1], comprising up to 8 individual blobs of emission and lasts for 10–15 ms. The blobs themselves have a spectral slope of ≈ 0 MHz s−1 [s superscript -1], are ≈200–250 kHz wide, appear every ≈400 kHz and last for ≈ 4–5 ms. These bursts show a brightness temperatures in the range 1012 [10 superscript 12] K, which suggests a coherent emission mechanism. We believe these are the first high temporal and spectral resolution interferometric observations of such rapid and narrow bandwidth solar bursts close to 1420 MHz and present an analysis of their temporal and spectral characteristics.