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  • SOLAR PHYSICS  (5)
  • SPACE SCIENCES  (3)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Published data on ionizing radiation (as reflected in sudden ionospheric disturbances), H-alpha importance, 10-cm flux, dynamic spectrum, and 200-MHz flux are analyzed for a group of 84 solar flares (from 1967 to 1970) classified by Pudovkin and Chertkov (1976). The group consists of 29 flares with southern orientation of the 100,000-km-scale overlying magnetic field, 32 with northern orientation, and 23 with indeterminate orientation; all have H-alpha importance greater than about 2. Slightly greater X-ray and optical emissions, but one-order-of-magnitude greater prompt 200-MHz and 10-cm fluxes are found in southern as compared to northern-oriented flares. It is inferred that the amount of electromagnetic flare energy radiated promptly from the corona, as compared with that radiated from the chromosphere, was significantly affectly by the orientation of the overlying large-scale magnetic field during the period of observation. This trend is shown to be consistent despite some periodic variation.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Solar Physics (ISSN 0038-0938); 85; June 198
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Instances of solar activity are discussed in terms of their relative interference with making solar terrestrial observations. Unexpected flares of significance are reported and the geophysical effects of these flares are noted.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: NOAA Solar-Terrest. Predictions Proc., Vol. 1; p 385-397
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Studies of sudden disintegrations of filaments in solar cycles 19 and 20 (to 1969) indicate that such events occur frequently. Approximately 30% of all large filaments in these cycles disintegrated in the course of their transit across the solar disk. 'Major' flares occurred with above average frequency on the last day on which 141 large disappearing filaments were observed. Relationships between a disintegrating filament on July 10-11, 1959, a prior major flare, a newly formed spot, and concomitant growth of H-alpha plage are presented. Observation of prior descending prominence material apparently directed towards the location of the flare of July 15, 1959 is reported. The development of the filament-associated flare of Feb. 13, 1967 is described.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Solar Physics; 23; Apr. 197
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Observational data on sunspots, the 2800-MHz flux, and calcium plages are interpreted which were obtained during the declining phase of solar cycle 20. It is shown that three pulses of activity occurred during this period and resulted in two conspicuous 'stillstands' in the smooth means of the sunspot, 2800-MHz, and plage data. The longitudes of centers of sunspot and flare activity are found to have clustered in identifiable zones or hemispheres for relatively long periods of time. The sun is seen to have had a relatively inactive hemisphere centered about zero deg longitude, and certain well defined coronal holes were apparently located near the middle of this hemisphere. The first sunspot groups of cycle 21 are observed to have formed in the longitude zones associated with relatively high levels of activity during cycle 20.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Solar Physics; 42; May 1975
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Although solar activity cycles are in general remarkably similar, cycles 18, 19, and 20, with maximums in 1947.5, 1958.2, and 1968.9, respectively, differed in the heights of their maximums, in the patterns of their development, and to a certain extent in the character of their manifestations of solar activity. Of the 20 solar cycles since 1755, the maximums in sunspot numbers for cycles 18, 19, and 20 rank as 3, 1, and 10, respectively. Cycle 18, with a maximum smoothed monthly sunspot number of 151.8, was the cycle of 'giant' spots. Cycle 19, with the highest recorded maximum, 201.3, included many large spots but failed to produce spots with areas equal to those of cycle 18. The highest known daily 2800-MHz flux occurred in cycle 18, not in cycle 19. Cycle 20, with a sunspot maximum of only 110.6, appears to have been close to the average cycle of the last 220 years. An attempt is made to compare the general levels of flare production in the three cycles. Cycle 19 is estimated to have been more flare-rich than cycle 18 by a much smaller factor than the original data implied. In cycle 20, general flare production drops conspicuously.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Evidence is presented for an intrinsically solar effect which may dominate such solar-terrestrial correlations as that reported by Chertkov (1976), where large H-alpha flares during 1967-1972 in solar active regions with overlying fields on a 100,000 km scale and predominantly north-to-south orientation were more efficient in the production of geomagnetic disturbances than comparable flares in regions whose fields at the flare sites were directed south-to-north. In addition to being responsible for geomagnetic disturbance enhancements, this purely solar effect may cause solar wind velocity and solar flare proton flux enhancements. If the effect can be generalized to other portions of the solar cycle, it could improve present understanding of the flare mechanism and therefore prove useful in the prediction of solar-terrestrial disturbances.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Geophysical Research Letters; 9; Mar. 198
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Ground based observations of flares are reviewed in search of information on flare build up on either a long or a short time scale. Plots of flare frequency and importance for certain individual centers of activity suggest a possible crescendo in flare occurrence days and hours before the development of large and significant flares. The X-ray records follow the same pattern of apparent build-up. A possible dependence between successive major flares, as phases one and two of a single complex flare event, suggests that the time scale in which the total flare event takes place may exhibit extreme variation.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
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  • 8
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Long-term variations in the height of solar maxima and in the relative spottedness of the northern and southern solar hemispheres are considered. Mean sunspot numbers in the present solar cycle are found to be similar to those in cycles with maxima in 1937, 1917, 1860, and 1769. Time variations within the 11-year cycle are considered. It is pointed out that all solar latitudes and longitudes do not attain maximum levels of activity at the same time. Furthermore, the course of solar activity as measured by sunspot number and 2800 MHz flux is seldom smooth but appears to advance by series of pulses or episodes. Study of the declining branches of solar cycles 12 through 19 suggests that there will be 5 to 6 primary fluctuations of activity on the declining branch of cycle 20 in the years 1970.5-1975. At least half of these pulses can be expected to include significantly flare-rich centers of activity.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Solar-terrestrial physics/1970; May 11, 1970 - May 13, 1970; Leningrad; Soviet Union
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