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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Mitchel and Roelof (1980) reported the detection of iron in high speed solar wind flows using the small, but finite sensitivity of solid state detectors to Fe ions in the low energy (50-200 keV protons) L1 channel of the NOAA/JHU energetic particle experiment (EPE). In the current investigation, the EPE response is modeled to a convected Maxwellian to obtain the thermal velocity, flow angle, and bulk velocity of the iron distribution. It is assumed that the iron bulk flow velocity can be represented as a vector sum of the hydrogen bulk velocity and an interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) aligned velocity increment. It is found that the velocity increment is smaller than the local Alfven speed in magnitude, and that the iron thermal velocity is comparable with or greater than the proton thermal velocity, with the 'thermal' velocity defined as the square root of 2kT/m.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: AD-A105214 , AFGL-TR-81-0279 , Geophysical Research Letters; 8; July 198
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Results for small loop thermal models of hard X-ray bursts are extended to large loops. In this model a magnetic arch with a coronal length of 45,000 km has the electrons near the top heated to temperatures above 1 billion K. The resulting conduction fronts which form are dominated by collisionless processes and travel down the arch to the transition region and chromosphere where they evaporate off part of the latter. This relatively cool material travels back up the loop and eventually quenches the source for energy injection times of order 10 sec. Most of the X-ray emission comes from the footpoints of the arch over most of the source lifetime and the spectrum is a power law with a typical spectral index of 3.0. Even though the efficiency gain in this model is only 2.8, it is much easier from the point of view of plasma physics to heat all the electrons in a plasma than to accelerate a substantial fraction of them.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA Plasma Astrophys.; p 401-404
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Methods for predicting the path edges and reducing observations of total solar eclipses for determining variations of the solar radius are described. Analyzed observations of the 1925 January eclipse show a 0.7 (arc second) decrease in the solar radius during the past fifty years.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Variations of the Solar Constant; p 117-120
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Data from simultaneous readings of the line intensities, Doppler shifts, and line widths of a sunspot ion emission lines between 1170-1700 A are reported. Subsonic and supersonic flows were observed in the same line of sight above the umbra. A reduction of coronal plasma over sunspots with an electron temperature exceeding 1,000,000 K was confirmed, concurrent with enhanced emission from the transition region plasma in the temperature range 200,000-1,000,000 K. The differential emission measure is noted to have been caused to shift because of the enhancement of the transition region plasma emission, where radiative losses dominated the energy balance. Calculations of the energy balance also indicated that a detected divergence in the enthalpy flux for the umbral downflows could balance the radiative losses in the electron temperature range 30,000-200,000 K.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: The physics of sunspots; Conference; Jul 14, 1981 - Jul 17, 1981; Sunspot, NM
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Detailed in situ observations from the ISEE 3 spacecraft of energetic electrons, plasma waves, and radio emission for the type II solar radio burst of February 17, 1979, are presented. The reduced, one-dimensional electron distribution function is constructed as a function of time. Since the faster electrons arrive before the slower ones, a bump on tail distribution forms which is unstable to the growth of Langmuir waves. The plasma wave growth computed from the distribution function agrees well with the observed onset of the Langmuir waves, and there is qualitative agreement between variations in the plasma wave levels and in the development of regions of positive slope in the function. The evolution of the function, however, predicts far higher plasma wave levels than those observed. The maximum levels observed are approximately equal to the threshold for nonlinear wave processes, such as oscillation two-stream instability and soliton collapse.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; vol. 251
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  • 6
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2006-06-04
    Description: The absolute value of the solar constant and the long term variations that exist in the absolute value of the solar constant were measured. The solar constant is the total irradiance of the Sun at a distance of one astronomical unit. An absolute radiometer removed from the effects of the atmosphere with its calibration tested in situ was used to measure the solar constant. The importance of an accurate knowledge of the solar constant is emphasized.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: NASA. Marshall Space Flight Center Spacelab Mission 1 Expt. Descriptions; 3 p
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: The Ultraviolet Spectrometer and Polarimeter on the Solar Maximum Mission spacecraft is described. It is pointed out that the instrument, which operates in the wavelength range 1150-3600 A, has a spatial resolution of 2-3 arcsec and a spectral resolution of 0.02 A FWHM in second order. A Gregorian telescope, with a focal length of 1.8 m, feeds a 1 m Ebert-Fastie spectrometer. A polarimeter comprising rotating Mg F2 waveplates can be inserted behind the spectrometer entrance slit; it permits all four Stokes parameters to be determined. Among the observing modes are rasters, spectral scans, velocity measurements, and polarimetry. Examples of initial observations made since launch are presented.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: The paper examines high-resolution solar flare iron line spectra recorded between 1.82 and 1.97 A by a spectrometer flown by the Naval Research Laboratory on an Air Force spacecraft launched on 1979 February 24. The emission line spectrum is due to inner-shell transitions in the ions Fe XX-Fe XXV. Using theoretical spectra and calculations of line intensities obtained by methods discussed by Merts, Cowan, and Magee (1976), electron temperatures as a function of time for two large class X flares are derived. These temperatures are deduced from intensities of lines of Fe XXII, Fe XXIII, and Fe XXIV. The determination of the differential emission measure between about 12-million and 20-million K using these temperatures is considered. The possibility of determining electron densities in flare and tokamak plasmas using the inner-shell spectra of Fe XXI and Fe XX is discussed.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; vol. 245
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: New observation with the Ultraviolet Spectrometer and Polarimeter (UVSP) of a number of manifestations of solar activity obtained during the first three months of Solar Maximum Mission operations are presented. Attention is given to polarimetry in sunspots, oscillations above sunspots, density diagnostics of transition-zone plasmas in active regions, and the eruptive prominence - coronal transient link.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; vol. 244
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Examples are presented of the time and energy dependence of the abundances and spectra of the major heavy ions He, C, O and Fe during solar flare events, taken from a survey using the UMD/MPI ULET telescope on IMP-8 during 1973-1977. In some cases, time variations were found in the O/He, O/C and Fe/O ratios which appear to be inconsistent with models based solely on rigidity dependent propagation in the interplanetary medium.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Contrib. to the 17th Intern. Conf. on Cosmic Rays; p 5-8
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