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Solar Radio Astronomy

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Solar Radio Astronomy. Adriana V. R. Silva. Center for Radio Astronomy ... 17 GHz: Nobeyama Solar Heliograph. 212 and 405 GHz: Submillimetric Solar Telescope ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Solar Radio Astronomy


1
Solar Radio Astronomy
  • Adriana V. R. Silva
  • Center for Radio Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Mackenzie University

MFU Angra dos Reis, 29/11/2004
2
Solar Group _at_ CRAAM
  • Pierre Kaufmann
  • Adriana V. R. Silva
  • C. Guillermo Gimenez de Castro
  • Emília Correia
  • Jean-Pierre Raulin
  • Joaquim E. R. Costa

3
Solar Atmosphere
  • Photosphere surface to 300 km, T5780 K,
    sunspots
  • Cromosphere up to 3,000 km above the surface,
    T104-105 K
  • Corona several solar radii, T2-4 million K,
    solar wind

4
White light
Ca
Infrared
Radio
H?
UV
X-ray
EUV
5
Magnetic Field
6
Global magnetic field
  • Generated by a dynamo in tachocline layer
  • Dipole close to the surface
  • Stronger in active regions
  • Magnetosphere envelops all the solar system

7
Active regions
Active region (sunspot)
8
Active regions
9
Solar Activity
10
Solar Activity
  • Location Solar atmosphere
  • Energy source magnetic field
  • 3 timescales
  • 11 years (solar activity cycle)
  • Weeks (sunspot lifetime)
  • Seconds to hours (flare and CME duration)

11
Activity
  • Sunspots
  • Flares
  • Coronal Mass Ejection
  • Occurrence follows the 11 year activity cycle

12
Sunspots
  • Dark regions of solar disk
  • Regions of intense magnetic field 100-2000 G
  • Cooler than their surroundings 4000-5000 K

13
Solar Flare
  • Sudden release of 1030-1032 erg (seconds to
    hours)
  • Energy source magnetic field

14
  • Particle acceleration up to MeV
  • Radiation
  • Local plasma heating

15
Coronal Mass Ejection
  • Associated to proeminence eruption and/or flares
  • matter (electrons, protons, and ions) is thrown
    into the interplanetary medium
  • Some of it may reach the Earth.

16
Ejeção de Massa
17
SOHO
visible
visible
UV (195 A)
18
Solar-Terrestrial Interaction
  • When the radiation and energetic particles from
    CME hit the Earth
  • Lethal doses of X-ray radiation to astronauts
  • Satellite orbit alterations due to drag
  • Magnetic storms

19
Effects at the Earth
  • Ionospheric alterations ? affect long distance
    communication
  • Spikes on high voltage lines
  • Blackouts
  • Erratic behavior of navegation instruments
  • Alterations in the ozone layer
  • Auroras
  • Influence Earths climate.

20
Solar Emission at Radio Frequencies
21
Types of emission
  • Quiet calm atmosphere
  • Height in the atmosphere where the emission at a
    certain frequency is produced may be inferred
    from the limb position, i.e., the solar radius.
  • Quiescent active region observation
  • Emission at different frequencies due to distinct
    mechanisms.
  • Transient flares and CMEs
  • Energetic particle emission

22
Emission Mechanisms (electrons)
  • gyrosynchrotron
  • flares (microwave e mm)
  • Thermal gyrosyn. and gyroresonance
  • Active regions (microwave)
  • Thermal bremstrahlung
  • Quiet sun
  • Active regions (mm)

23
Quiet radio emission
  • Multiple wavelengths observations ? information
    about the different layers of the atmosphere.

24
Solar Radio Observation
  • 17 GHz Nobeyama Solar Heliograph
  • 212 and 405 GHz Submillimetric Solar Telescope

25
Nobeyama 17 and 34 GHz
  • Japan
  • Interferometer 84 antennae with 80 m diameter
  • High spatial resolution (10)
  • Daily maps since 1991.

26
Radius at 17 GHz
  • Radius measured where the emission equals 50 of
    its most common value
  • points fit by a circle
  • Radius at 15 (or 11,000 km) above the
    photosphere
  • Chromospheric emission.

27
Radius temporal variation
Selhorst et al. (2004)
28
Intensity profile
visible
radio
29
Limb brightening
atmosphere
30
Selhorst et al. (2003)
  • North polar limb
  • South solar limb
  • Sunspot number

31
Atmospheric Model
Selhorst et al. (2005)
  • From the high resolution 17 GHz observations of
  • Disk center brightness temperature (1-400 GHz)
  • Limb brightening
  • Solar radius.
  • Density and temperature distribution of
    atmosphere.

32
Submillimetric Solar Telescope (SST)
  • Location CASLEO Observatory in the Argentinean
    Andes (2500 m)
  • 2 frequencies
  • 212 GHz
  • (4 receptors)
  • 405 GHz
  • (2 receptors)
  • 40 ms temporal resolution
  • Solar Dedicated

33
Submm solar radius
  • Limb region where the intensity is 50 of its
    most common value
  • Points fit by a circle.
  • Results
  • 212 GHz 969 ? 5 arcsec ( 6700 km)
  • 405 GHz 972 ? 8 arcsec ( 8400 km)

34
Solar radius at radio frequencies
Costa, Homor e Kaufmann (1986)
35
Active Regions
  • Temperature and density distribution
  • Atmospheric height of a certain emission
    frequency (radius)
  • Emission mechanism (spectra)
  • Oscillations

36
Active regions
  • Bright regions (not dark as sunspots)
  • Emission is a combination of thermal
    bremsstrahlung gyroresonance
  • AR at 17, 34, 212, and 405 GHz

37
Brightness temperature
Silva et al. (2005)
  • Brightness temperature above quiet Sun value

38
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39
Active region spectra
  • Increasing spectrum with slope 2
  • Fit by thermal bremsstrahlung for three
    parameters temperature, density, and height
  • Obtain minimum density by assuming that 405 GHz
    is transition to optically thin.

40
Spectra of 23 AR
  • Emission from an optically thick cylindrical
    source of height 108cm
  • Plasma effective temperature 10,000-20,000 K.
  • Minimum source density 1011 cm-3 (assuming ??1
    at 405 GHz.

41
Radio emission from active regions
42
Minute Oscillation
  • Tracking an active region
  • SST beam position
  • 212 GHz (1,2,3,4) 4 FWHM
  • 405 GHz (5,6) 2 FWHM

Silva et al. (2004)
43
Subtraction of Earth atmosphere
(01/06/2002)
44
Fourier analysis
  • Oscillation is no symmetric (rise longer than
    fall)
  • Dominant frequencies by Fourier analysis

45
Oscillation periods
  • Results from the data of 54 whole days between
    june and July of 2002
  • Periods between 4 and 7 minutes
  • Most common period is 5 minutes (3.3 mHz) as
    found in optical and visible data.

46
5 min p-mode
2
3
SST beams
47
Solar flare at 17 GHz
48
Solar flares
  • Temporal evolution in radio similar to that of
    X-rays, which are also produced during flares
  • Radio and X-ray emission produced by the same
    population of accelerated electrons
  • Radio emission produced by different mechanisms
    depending on the frequency
  • Decimetric coherent emission
  • Microwaves gyrosynchrotron
  • Mm and submm gyrosynchrotronbremsstrahlung

49
Flares in X-rays
50
Soft X-rays
Hard X-rays
microwave
mm
51
Solar flares in radio
  • It is possible to obtain estimates of coronal
    magnetic fields, not possible by direct
    measurements
  • Radio telescopes are much more sensitive, thus it
    is possible to detect the accelerated electrons,
    even in the smallest events.

52
04-nov-2003 flare
  • X28 flare - GOES (biggest ever detected)
  • Time 1940-1950 UT
  • Observed at X-rays, ultraviolet, Ha, microwaves
    and submillimetric wavelengths
  • pulses of 1000 sfu with duration of 500-700 ms
  • increasing spectrum even at 405 GHz

Kaufmann et al. (2004)
53
Microwave
405 GHz
212 GHz
Pulses
54
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55
Radio spectrum
New THz component
56
Subsecond pulses
Raulin et al. (2003)
  • Duration of 100 ms to 1 s.
  • Pulse occurrence rate and amplitude time profile
    follow the temporal evolution of the bulk
    emission.
  • Increasing spectra.

bulk
amplitude
rate
57
Pulses X CME
Kaufmann et al. (2003)
  • 22-mar-2000 flare
  • 100 K pulses with duration of 100 to 300 ms
  • start of the pulses coincide with the lift off
    time of the coronal mass ejection (CME).

58
Radio observations-summary
  • Solar radius
  • Detect the height in the atmosphere where the
    emission is coming from.
  • Radius varies in time (11 years)
  • Model the solar atmosphere from
  • central intensity, radius, and limb brightening
  • Active regions
  • Thermal bremsstrahlung from sources of 1-2 104 K,
    and densities gt 1011 cm-3 (chromosphere)
  • 5 min oscillations in active regions

59
Radio submm flares -summary
  • Two component emission
  • bulk (minutes), spectra is a prolongation of the
    gyrosynchroton, and
  • pulses (subsecond) with increasing spectra.
  • Very large flare (4-nov-2003)
  • bulk emission with increasing spectrum peak at
    THz.

60
Pulses - summary
  • Subsecond duration
  • Occurrence rate follows the time profile of bulk
    emission
  • Increasing spectra
  • Start time coincides with the launch time of CMEs
    (even when there is no flare)
  • Unknown origin.
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