Chromospheric Evaporation and Decimetric Radio Emission in Solar Flares
Abstract
We have discovered decimetric signatures of the chromospheric evaporation process. Evidence for the radio detection of chromospheric evaporation is based on the radio-inferred values of (1) the electron density, (2) the propagation speed, and (3) the timing, which are found to be in good agreement with statistical values inferred from the blueshifted Ca XIX soft X-ray line. The physical basis of our model is that free-free absorption of plasma emission is strongly modified by the steep density gradient and the large temperature increase in the upflowing flare plasma. The steplike density increase at the chromospheric evaporation front causes a local discontinuity in the plasma frequency, manifested as almost infinite drift rate in decimetric type III bursts. The large temperature increase of the upflowing plasma considerably reduces the local free-free opacity (due to the T-3/2 dependence) and thus enhances the brightness of radio bursts emitted at the local plasma frequency near the chromospheric evaporation front, while a high-frequency cutoff is expected in the high-density regions behind the front, which can be used to infer the velocity of the upflowing plasma. From model calculations we find strong evidence that decimetric bursts with a slowly drifting high-frequency cutoff are produced by fundamental plasma emission, contrary to the widespread belief that decimetric bursts are preferentially emitted at the harmonic plasma level. We analyze 21 flare episodes from 1991-1993 for which broadband (100-3000 MHz) radio dynamic spectra from Pheonix, hard X-ray data from (BATSE/CGRO) and soft X-ray data from Burst and Transient Source Experiment/Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (GOES) were available.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- January 1995
- DOI:
- 10.1086/175141
- Bibcode:
- 1995ApJ...438..997A
- Keywords:
-
- Chromosphere;
- Evaporation;
- Solar Flares;
- Solar Radio Bursts;
- Solar Wind;
- Sun;
- Astronomical Models;
- Solar Physics;
- Solar X-Rays;
- Solar Physics;
- SUN: CHROMOSPHERE;
- SUN: FLARES;
- SUN: RADIO RADIATION