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Complementary Bursts, Coronal Inhomogeneities and New Microscopic Spectral Features of Solar Bursts in Type IV Bursts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 August 2015

H. S. Sawant*
Affiliation:
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad-9, India
R. V. Bhonsle
Affiliation:
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad-9, India
S. S. Degaonkar
Affiliation:
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad-9, India
T. Takakura
Affiliation:
Tokyo Astronomical Observatory, Mitaka, Tokyo, Japan
*
*Present address: University of Maryland, Clark Lake Radio Observatory, P.O. Box 128, Borrego Springs, California 92004, USA.

Abstract

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Complementary bursts (C.B's) have been observed in the decametric range during noise storms and/or type IV activity. These bursts essentially consist of two components, each component having a duration ~ 1 second. The first component shows weak emission or emission gap over a certain frequency range. The second component is observed after a certain delay. If the bursts are assumed to be generated at the fundamental, and if the radiation corresponding to the gap propagates through an electron density irregularity located close to the source along the line of sight, whose cross-section is less than the linear extent of the source, then almost all properties of the C.B.'s can be explained. High sensitivity, and high frequency and time resolution spectra of type IV bursts at 137 MHz revealed new microscopic spectral features displaying “wave-like” and “fork-like” shapes.

Type
Session IV - Solar Bursts - Meter Wavelengths
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1980 

References

Sawant, H.S., Alurkar, S.K. and Bhonsle, R.V.: 1975, Nature, 253, pp. 329330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar