First Frequency-time-resolved Imaging Spectroscopy Observations of Solar Radio Spikes

Clarkson, Daniel L. and Kontar, Eduard P. and Gordovskyy, Mykola and Chrysaphi, Nicolina and Vilmer, Nicole (2021) First Frequency-time-resolved Imaging Spectroscopy Observations of Solar Radio Spikes. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 917 (2). L32. ISSN 2041-8205

[thumbnail of Clarkson_2021_ApJL_917_L32.pdf] Text
Clarkson_2021_ApJL_917_L32.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Solar radio spikes are short duration and narrow bandwidth fine structures in dynamic spectra observed from the GHz to tens of MHz range. Their very short duration and narrow frequency bandwidth are indicative of subsecond small-scale energy release in the solar corona, yet their origin is not understood. Using the LOw Frequency ARray, we present spatially, frequency, and time resolved observations of individual radio spikes associated with a coronal mass ejection. Individual radio spike imaging demonstrates that the observed area is increasing in time and the centroid positions of the individual spikes move superluminally parallel to the solar limb. Comparison of spike characteristics with that of individual Type IIIb striae observed in the same event show similarities in duration, bandwidth, drift rate, polarization, and observed area, as well the spike and striae motion in the image plane suggesting fundamental plasma emission with the spike emission region on the order of ∼108 cm, with brightness temperature as high as 1013 K. The observed spatial, spectral, and temporal properties of the individual spike bursts are also suggestive of the radiation responsible for spikes escaping through anisotropic density turbulence in closed loop structures with scattering preferentially along the guiding magnetic field oriented parallel to the limb in the scattering region. The dominance of scattering on the observed time profile suggests the energy release time is likely to be shorter than what is often assumed. The observations also imply that the density turbulence anisotropy along closed magnetic field lines is higher than along open field lines.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: East Asian Archive > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@eastasianarchive.com
Date Deposited: 10 May 2023 09:08
Last Modified: 14 Aug 2025 03:32
URI: http://authors.go2articles.com/id/eprint/687

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item