Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x5gtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-04T10:28:38.275Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Slowly-Varying Microwave Emissions from the Solar Corona

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

Ken F. Tapping
Affiliation:
Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory, P.O. Box 248, Penticton, British Columbia, V2A 6K3, Canada
Karen L. Harvey
Affiliation:
Solar Physics Research Corporation, 4270 Calle Desecada, Tucson, AZ 85718, USA

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Measurements of the total microwavef emission from the solar disc at single and multiple wavelengths provide a useful indicator of solar activity, and correlate well with other indices of solar activity and with solar luminosity.

Since activity in the solar atmosphere is driven by the emergence, redistribution and disappearance of magnetic flux, the close and linear correspondence between the microwave flux densities, as observed at 10.7 and 21 cm wavelengths, provide a convenient and objective indicator of solar magnetic activity.

Microwave emissions from the “non-flaring” solar corona originate in a wide range of sources. These generally lie in active regions, and comprise two main types: bright, compact sources a few arc-seconds across and brightness temperatures of the order of 106K, and weaker, diffuse sources arc-minutes in size and having brightness temperatures of about 104K. There is also evidence of a weaker, widespread emission covering large areas of the solar disc. The compact sources are probably due to gyroresonance, although some could be non-thermal. The diffuse widespread emission are almost certainly free-free thermal emission from plasma concentrations in the corona.

The strong correlation between the 10.7 cm flux and other activity indices, even when they are produced by disimilar processes and at different heights in the solar atmosphere, may at least partially be due to the overiding role played by magnetic activity in dictating the structure of the chromosphere and corona. However, the consistent correspondences over wide ranges of activity suggest dependences upon relatively few quantities and that the microwave emission from the non-flaring Sun is dominated by a single process, which is closely and simply-related to density and temperature, such as free-free (bremsstrahlung) emission from plasma concentrations trapped in coronal and chromospheric magnetic structures. Attempts to “budget” the total microwave emission at 2.8, 10.7 and 21 cm wavelengths suggest that this is the case.

Where ambient magnetic fields exceed 3000/λ Gauss, gyroresonance can produce much higher optical depths than free-free emission, and accounts for the bright emission observed in the vicinity of sunspots. Although not the dominant contributor to the total emission from the solar disc, these sources stand out brightly in high-resolution maps of active regions.

To examine the assumptions of dominance of free-free thermal emission, and simple dependences upon few parameters, we compute the spectrum for a range of coronal density models, and compare the results with observations. The agreement is good, suggesting that the total disc flux is dominated by thermal, free-free emission, and that the intensity is controlled mainly by the density at the base of the corona, but is otherwise fairly tolerant of the density model used.

Type
Variability of Solar and Stellar Irradiance Related to the Network, Active Regions (Sunspots and Plages), and Large-Scale Magnetic Structures
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1994

References

Alissandrakis, C.E., Kundu, M.R. & Lantos, P. 1980 A model for sunspot-associated emission at 6-cm wavelength. Astronomy and Astrophysics 82, 3040.Google Scholar
Alissandrakis, C.E. & Kundu, M.R. 1984 Center-to-limb variation of a sunspot-associated microwave source. Astron. Ap. 139, 271284.Google Scholar
Burke, I. 1993 Imaging the Sun with the DRAO Synthesis Telescope. MSc thesis, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.Google Scholar
Chiuderi Drago, F. & Melozzi, M. 1984 Non-thermal radio sources in solar active regions. Astronomy and Astrophysics 131, 103119.Google Scholar
Chiuderi Drago, F., Bandiera, R., Falciani, R., Antonucci, E., Lang, K.R., Willson, R.F., Shibasaki, K. & Slottje, C. 1982 Multiple wavelength observations of a solar active region. Solar Physics 80, 7185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christiansen, W.N. & Mathewson, D.S. 1959 The origin of the slowly-varying component. Paris Symposium on Radio Astronomy (ed. Bracewell, ). pp. 108117. Stanford University, Stanford, California.Google Scholar
Covington, A.E. 1947 Microwave solar noise observations during the partial eclipse of November 23, 1946, Nature 159, 405406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Covington, A.E. 1948 Solar noise observations on 10.7cm. Proceedings of the IRE 36, 454457.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denisse, J.F. 1948 Etude des émissions radio électriques solaires d’origine purement thermique. PhD. thesis, University of Paris, France.Google Scholar
Erskine, F.T., Kundu, M.R. & Rao, A.P. 1983 6-cm observations of a solar active region and bursts with 6 seconds resolution. Astronomy and Astrophysics 83, 256260.Google Scholar
Felli, M., Poletto, G. & Tofani, G. 1977 Magnetic and microwave structure in solar active regions. Solar Physics 51, 6581.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Felli, M., Lang, K-K. & Willson, R.F. 1981 VLA observations of solar active regions 1, The slowly-varying component. Astrophys. J. 247, 325327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaizauskas, V. & Tapping, K.F. 1980 Long-lived microwave pulsations observed in a complex solar active region. Astrophys. J. 241, 804810.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaizauskas, V. & Tapping, K.F. 1988 Compact sites of microwave emission at 2.8 centimeter wavelength inside solar active regions. Astrophys. J. 325, 912926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, K.L. 1992 Measurements of solar magnetic fields as an indicator of solar activity evolution. In Proceedings of the Workshop on the Solar Electromagnetic Radiation Study for Solar Cycle 22 (ed. Donnelly, R.F.), pp. 113129. NOAA ERL SEL, Boulder, CO., USA.Google Scholar
Kakinuma, T. & Swarup, G. 1962 A model for the sources of the slowly-varying component of microwave solar radiation. Astrophys. J. 136, 975994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koutchmy, S., Zirker, J.B., Steinolfson, R.S. & Zhugzda, J.D. 1991 Coronal activity. In The Solar Interior and Atmosphere (ed. Cox, A.N., Livingston, W.C. & Matthews, M.S.). pp. 10441086. Univ. Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ, USA.Google Scholar
Krüger, A. 1979 Introduction to Solar Radio Astronomy and Radio Physics. Geophysics and Astrophysics Monographs, No. 6, Vol. 16, Riedel, D. Hingham, Mass.Google Scholar
Krüger, A., Hildebrandt, J. & Furstenberg, F. 1985 A working model for the solar S-component radio emission. Astronomy and Astrophysics 143, 7276.Google Scholar
Kundu, M.R. 1965 Solar Radio Astronomy. Wiley-Interscience, New York.Google Scholar
Kundu, M.R., Schmahl, E.J. & Rao, A.P. 1981 VLA observations of solar active regions at 6-cm wavelength. Astron. Ap. 94, 7279.Google Scholar
Lantos, P. 1968 A model for magnetic gyromagnetic radioemission from solar active regions. Ann. Astrophys 31, 105113.Google Scholar
Lehaney, F.J. & Yabsley, D.E. 1949 Solar radiation at 1200Mc/s, 600Mc/s and 200Mc/s. Aust. J. Sci. Res., Ser. A 2, 4862.Google Scholar
Nicolet, M. & Bossey, L. 1984 Aeronomica Acta: “Solar fluxes as indices of solar activity”. published by the Belgisch Instituut voor Ruimte Aeronomie, A-No. 282.Google Scholar
Pallavicini, R., Vaiana, G.S., Tofani, G. & Felli, M. 1979 The coronal atmosphere above solar active regions: the comparison of high spatial resolution soft X-ray and centimetric observations. Astrophys. J. 229, 375386.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabin, D.M., Devore, C.R., Sheeley, N.R. Jr., Harvey, K.R. & Hoeksema, J.T. 1991 The solar activity cycle. The Solar Interior and Atmosphere (ed. Cox, A.N., Livingston, W.C. & Matthews, M.S.), pp. 781843. Univ. Arizona. Press, Tucson, AZ, USA.Google Scholar
Shevgaonkar, R.K. & Kundu, M.R. 1985 Time variability of solar active regions at centimeter wavelengths. Solar Physics 98, 119126.Google Scholar
Shibasaki, K., Chiuderi Drago, F., Melozzi, M., Slottje, C. & Antonucci, E. 1983 Microwave, ultraviolet and soft X-ray observations of Hale Region 16898, Solar Physics 89, 307321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slottje, C. 1978 Millisecond microwave spikes in a solar flare. Nature 257, 520521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slottje, C. 1980 Fast, fine structure in solar microwave bursts. In Radio Physics of the Sun (ed. Kundu, M.R. & Gergely, T.). IAU Symposium 86, 195201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smerd, S.F. & Westfold, K.C. 1949 The characteristics of radiofrequency radiation in an ionized gas, with applications to the transfer of radiation in the solar atmosphere. Philos. Mag. Ser. 7 40, 831848.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tapping, K.F., Kuijpers, J., Kaastra, J.S., Van Nieuwkoop, J., Graham, D. & Slottje, C. 1983 VLBI of solar flares. Astronomy and Astrophysics 122, 177180.Google Scholar
Tapping, K.F. 1987 Recent solar radio astronomy at centimeter wavelengths, the temporal variability of the 10.7cm flux. J. Geopkys. Res. No. D1 92, 829838.Google Scholar
Tapping, K.F. & Detracey, B. 1980 The origin of the 10.7cm flux. Solar Physics 127, 321332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waldmeier, M. & Müller, K. 1950 Die Sonnenstrahlung im Gebeit von λ = 10cm. Z. für Astrophys. 27, 5863.Google Scholar
Waldmeier, M. 1959 A comparison between radioheliograms and optical observations of the solar corona. In Paris Symposium on Radio Astronomy (ed. Bracewell, ). pp. 118122. Stanford University, Stanford, California.Google Scholar
Webb, D.F., Davis, J.M., Kundu, M.R. & Velusamy, T. 1983 X-ray and microwave observations of active regions Solar Physics 85, 267283.Google Scholar
Zhao, R. & Jin, S. 1981 C.A.S.: Astronomy Circular #9. Chinese Astron. Soc. Astron. Circ. 9, 37.Google Scholar
Zheleznakov, V.V. 1962 On the origin of the slowly-varying component of the solar radio emission. Soviet Astronomy 6, 39.Google Scholar
Zlotnik, E.Y. 1968 On the theory of the slowly-varying component of the solar radio emission. Astron. Zh. 45, 310317.Google Scholar
Zwaan, C. 1987 Elements and patterns in the solar magnetic field. Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics 25, 83111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar