| Literature DB >> 29374211 |
I H Cairns1, V V Lobzin2,3, A Donea4, S J Tingay5, P I McCauley2, D Oberoi6, R T Duffin2,5,7, M J Reiner8,9, N Hurley-Walker5, N A Kudryavtseva5,10, D B Melrose2, J C Harding2, G Bernardi11,12,13, J D Bowman14, R J Cappallo15, B E Corey15, A Deshpande16, D Emrich5, R Goeke17, B J Hazelton18, M Johnston-Hollitt5,19, D L Kaplan20, J C Kasper12, E Kratzenberg15, C J Lonsdale15, M J Lynch5, S R McWhirter15, D A Mitchell5,21, M F Morales18, E Morgan17, S M Ord5,12, T Prabu16, A Roshi22, N Udaya Shankar16, K S Srivani17, R Subrahmanyan16,22, R B Wayth5,23, M Waterson5,24, R L Webster21,23, A R Whitney15, A Williams5, C L Williams17.
Abstract
Type III solar radio bursts are the Sun's most intense and frequent nonthermal radio emissions. They involve two critical problems in astrophysics, plasma physics, and space physics: how collective processes produce nonthermal radiation and how magnetic reconnection occurs and changes magnetic energy into kinetic energy. Here magnetic reconnection events are identified definitively in Solar Dynamics Observatory UV-EUV data, with strong upward and downward pairs of jets, current sheets, and cusp-like geometries on top of time-varying magnetic loops, and strong outflows along pairs of open magnetic field lines. Type III bursts imaged by the Murchison Widefield Array and detected by the Learmonth radiospectrograph and STEREO B spacecraft are demonstrated to be in very good temporal and spatial coincidence with specific reconnection events and with bursts of X-rays detected by the RHESSI spacecraft. The reconnection sites are low, near heights of 5-10 Mm. These images and event timings provide the long-desired direct evidence that semi-relativistic electrons energized in magnetic reconnection regions produce type III radio bursts. Not all the observed reconnection events produce X-ray events or coronal or interplanetary type III bursts; thus different special conditions exist for electrons leaving reconnection regions to produce observable radio, EUV, UV, and X-ray bursts.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29374211 PMCID: PMC5786056 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-19195-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Standard cartoon of a microscopic magnetic reconnection site, showing the inflowing and outflowing plasma and magnetic field lines plus the 4 “jets” of energized and heated particles close to the magnetic separatrices. (b) A “cusp”current sheet near the apex of a macroscopic magnetic field loop. (c) Turbulence, 3D, and other effects in a realistic coronal loop – cusp structure lead to a macroscopic current sheet with multiple embedded microscopic reconnection regions that combine to form macroscopic outflows and 4 macroscopic jets; the downgoing ones cause standard optical flares and UV, EUV, and X-ray emissions near the magnetic footpoints.
Figure 2Solar images near AR11302 on 25 September 2011: Largescale images from (top row) SDO-AIA at 193 Å and (middle row) STEREO B’s EUVI instrument at 195 Å, showing the locations of the active region and its magnetic loops, solar limb, open magnetic field lines, and associated jets and outflows during a quiet period (≈01:05 UT) and during a reconnection event (≈01:22 UT). The reconnection region is centered near X = −770 and Y = 170 arcsec. The SDO viewpoint is from Earth (top panels) while the STEREO-B viewpoint (middle panels) is from near 120 degrees eastwards of the Sun-Earth line, corresponding to clockwise from Earth along Earth’s orbit. Magnetic field lines obtained from the PFSS model are overplotted on the top-left panel, with green and white indicating open and closed field lines, respectively. Cross-hairs in the middle panels identify the reconnection region and downward flows, viewed from STEREO B. The bottom row shows a zoomed-in 193 Å SDO-AIA image (left), with outflows along open magnetic field lines bounded approximately by the white lines, and a position-time plot of the outflows (right), formed by summing the intensity transverse to the white lines as a function of distance along the white lines. North, south, east, and west are the top, bottom, left, and right sides of the images. See text body for further details and online materials for corresponding movies.
Figure 3Strongly zoomed-in SDO-AIA images of reconnection regions near AR11302 on 25 September 2011 at 171 Å (left) and 193 Å (right): double-sided upward-directed jets, downward-directed jets, current sheets and cusp-like geometries on top of low-lying magnetic loops are clearly visible, as well as projected transverse-directed higher loops. The black contour in the top-left panel bounds the region used for the DEM calculation. See text body for further details and online materials for corresponding movies.
Figure 4Radio data for the period 01:00–01:30 UT on 25 September 2011: (a) Learmonth RSTN fluxes as a function of frequency and time, showing activity at 245 and 410 MHz near 01:19 and 01:12 UT; (b) calibrated dynamic spectrum over the 25–180 MHz range of the Learmonth radio spectrograph, showing outbursts near 01:19 and 01:22 UT of multiple type III events; (c) Radio dynamic spectrum from NASA’s STEREO B spacecraft for frequencies 250 kHz–12 MHz, with intensity colour-coded (the intensity decreases from red to yellow, green, blue, and black). The rapidly-drifting, almost vertical, signals near 01:10, 01:12, 01:14, 01:19, and 01:23 UT are weak interplanetary type III bursts.
Figure 5Radio observations for 01:05–01:30 UT on 25 September 2011: (top) the 32-tile prototype MWA for the domains 78.7–109.4 MHz and 109.5–140.1 MHz and (bottom) the Learmonth radiospectrograph for 75–140 MHz, with the MWA domains marked using white boxes. Frequency-dependent instrumental backgrounds were subtracted from both datasets. Amplitude scale is in dB from the background. Strong type IIIs are visible across the full frequency domains near 01:19 and 01:22 UT. Strong intermittent interference causes horizontal bands in the Learmonth data (e.g., near 98–99 and 125 MHz).
Figure 6Source locations of (a) MWA radio source at 01:22 UT and 138 MHz (black contours) superposed on a SDO AIA 193 Å image from 0113 UT and with the synthesized MWA beam shown (ellipsoid in the lower left) – these are aligned by comparing the time- and frequency-varying radio sources over the solar disk for the approximate period 01:00–03:00 UT (including sources near both the east and west limbs) with the astrometrically precise SDO image, then rotated into solar coordinates with solar north vertically up – and (b) RHESSI sources at 3–6 keV (green contours) and 12–25 keV (yellow contours) at 01:19:07 superposed onto the SDO-AIA image at 193 Å for time 01:19:07 UT.
Figure 7Energy fluxes versus time for the period 01:06:40–01:26:40 UT: SDO-AIA wavelengths 171, 193, 304, and 1700 Å, masked over the spatial domain of interest, MWA (blue line) and Learmonth (green line) integrated over their frequency domains (arbitrary units), RHESSI 3–6 and 12–25 keV (red curves), masked over the spatial domain of interest, and GOES 1–8 Å flux.