* Astronomy

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Sun 20.01.05


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Sun 20.01.05
Permalink  
 


Title: An Extreme Solar Event of 20 January 2005: Properties of the Flare and the Origin of Energetic Particles
Authors: V. V. Grechnev (1), V. G. Kurt (2), I. M. Chertok (3), A. M. Uralov (1), H. Nakajima (4), A. T. Altyntsev (1), A. V. Belov (3), B. Yu. Yushkov (2), S. N. Kuznetsov (2), L. K. Kashapova (1), N. S. Meshalkina (1), N. P. Prestage (5) ((1) Institute of Solar-Terrestrial Physics SB RAS, Irkutsk, Russia, (2) Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics Moscow Lomonosov State University, Moscow, Russia, (3) Pushkov Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere and Radiowave Propagation (IZMIRAN), Troitsk, Russia, (4) Nobeyama Radio Observatory, Minamimaki, Minamisaku, Japan, (5) IPS Radio and Space Services Culgoora Solar Observatory, Australia)
(Version v2)

The extreme solar and SEP event of 20 January 2005 is analysed from two perspectives. Firstly, we study features of the main phase of the flare, when the strongest emissions from microwaves up to 200 MeV gamma-rays were observed. Secondly, we relate our results to a long-standing controversy on the origin of SEPs arriving at Earth, i.e., acceleration in flares, or shocks ahead of CMEs. All emissions from microwaves up to 2.22 MeV line gamma-rays during the main flare phase originated within a compact structure located just above sunspot umbrae. A huge radio burst with a frequency maximum at 30 GHz was observed, indicating the presence of a large number of energetic electrons in strong magnetic fields. Thus, protons and electrons responsible for flare emissions during its main phase were accelerated within the magnetic field of the active region. The leading, impulsive parts of the GLE, and highest-energy gamma-rays identified with pi^0-decay emission, are similar and correspond in time. The origin of the pi^0-decay gamma-rays is argued to be the same as that of lower energy emissions. We estimate the sky-plane speed of the CME to be 2000-2600 km/s, i.e., high, but of the same order as preceding non-GLE-related CMEs from the same active region. Hence, the flare itself rather than the CME appears to determine the extreme nature of this event. We conclude that the acceleration, at least, to sub-relativistic energies, of electrons and protons, responsible for both the flare emissions and the leading spike of SEP/GLE by 07 UT, are likely to have occurred simultaneously within the flare region. We do not rule out a probable contribution from particles accelerated in the CME-driven shock for the leading GLE spike, which seemed to dominate later on.

Read more (2068kb, PDF)

__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.



Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard