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  • Cell & Developmental Biology  (298)
  • SOLAR PHYSICS  (256)
  • 1985-1989
  • 1975-1979  (554)
  • 1978  (554)
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  • 1985-1989
  • 1975-1979  (554)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The present state of research on the influence of solar sunspot activity on tropospheric temperature and pressure is reviewed. The existence of an 11-year temperature cycle of 5 different types is affirmed. A cyclic change in atmospheric pressure, deducing characteristic changes between 11-year cycles is discussed. The existence of 80-year and 5-to-6-year cycles of temperature is established, and physical causes for birth are suggested.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: NASA-TM-75345
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The center-to-limb variation of the He II 304- and 256-A lines and He I 584- and 537-A lines is derived for different solar features, but averaged over the chromospheric supergranulation structure. The general trend is for limb brightening in quiet-sun regions, limb neutrality in unipolar magnetic regions (UMR), and limb darkening in polar coronal holes. The center-to-limb behavior in these optically thick emission lines indicates collisional excitation and decreasing transition-region temperature gradients with respect to optical depth in the sequence quiet sun to UMR to coronal hole.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: PB80-118110 , Astrophysical Journal; vol. 220
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: Skylab and ground-based observations in the extreme UV range of the spectrum are used to analyze characteristics of coronal holes, and to correlate their development with variations in the solar cycle. The mergence of bipolar magnetic regions (BMR) during the declining phase of the cycle is held reponsible for the formation of large equatorial holes (M-regions, which cause recurring geomagnetic storms). The BMR mergence model can also be applied to polar cap holes.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Solar Physics; 56; Jan. 197
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-08-27
    Description: An atlas is presented which contains daily full-sun photographs of the soft X-ray solar corona taken in two filters with an X-ray telescope on the Apollo telescope mount of Skylab for the period from May 29 to November 27, 1973. The passband of the first filter covers the wavelength regions from 2 to 32 A and 44 to 54 A; the second filter covers the region from 2 to 17 A. Characteristics of the instrument, the wavelength response, and sensitivity are described along with the total data base, of which the atlas represents only 1%. Comparisons are made with observations of the white-light corona, photospheric magnetic field, H-alpha radiation from the chromosphere, and 284-A Fe XV emission from the corona. A complete bibliography of scientific papers that have used the data base and a bibliography of catalogs and atlases containing related data for the same observational period are provided.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series; 38; Sept
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Attempts were made to determine the role of the interplanetary magnetic field in controlling: (1) particle acceleration processes in the earth's polar cap; (2) plasma convection patterns at high latitudes; and, (3) the topology of magnetic field lines in the earth's polar cusps. The primary result of the study on polar-cap particle acceleration regions was that they tend to occur in only one polar cap at a time, and that they occur in the hemisphere for which the magnetospheric tail-lobe field lines have solar-magnetospheric x components that are antiparallel to those of the interplanetary and tail-lobe magnetic field. Southward-directed interplanetary magnetic fields give rise to broad convection throats which cover several hours of local time across the dayside cleft. Under such conditions, solar-wind plasma is channeled efficiently through the polar cusps to populate the plasma mantle and dayside boundary layer. On the other hand, the appearance of strong northward components in the interplanetary magnetic field result in a very constricted throat, resulting in inefficient plasma entry at the cusps by diffusion processes.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: NASA-CR-158069
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Observations of solar X-ray flares with a graphite-crystal spectrometer aboard the OSO 8 satellite are discussed. The development of the temperature and emission measure of a typical subflare is examined, and the temperature dependence of three Si satellite line systems is derived. Possible electron densities in the range between 10 to the 13th power and 10 to the 14th power per cu cm are determined from the intensities of He-like lines. The results indicate that it is always possible to fit a single-temperature model during all phases of flares and suggest that the energy in a coronal soft X-ray event is injected on time scales of minutes rather than instantaneously.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Plenary Meeting; May 29, 1978 - Jun 10, 1978; Innsbruck; Austria
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: NASA's long-range plan for the study of solar-terrestrial relations includes a Solar Probe Mission in which a spacecraft is placed in an eccentric orbit with perihelion at four solar radii. Possible radiation damage to the spacecraft and mission from energetic particles was discussed at a Solar Probe Environment Workshop which concluded that it would be unlikely for such a spacecraft to suffer fatal radiation damage, although a severe problem exists in limiting the neutron flux from a radioactive power supply enough to allow solar neutrons to be detected.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: NASA-CR-157595 , JPL-PUB-78-64 , Jan 19, 1978 - Jan 20, 1978; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Simultaneous solar-wind proton data obtained at several heliocentric distances during radial alignments are compared. The radial variations associated with two high-speed streams in the solar wind are studied as examples of the radial evolution of the solar-wind speed distribution and of high-speed streams in the solar wind as observed in the ecliptic plane in 1973. Pioneer 11 data on high-speed streams in the solar wind observed at about 1.5 and 3.7 AU are compared with the corresponding high-speed-stream data obtained at earth. These analyses indicate that as these high-speed streams propagated to these extended heliocentric distances, there was an erosion of the highest speeds and a general narrowing of the speed distribution. These observations are consistent with the exchange of momentum in the solar wind between high-speed streams and low-speed streams as they propagate outward from the sun.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 13, 1977 - Aug 26, 1977; Plovdiv; Bulgaria
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  • 9
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    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Several aspects of a solar flare model that emphasizes evidence for the formation of current filaments as mechanisms of field dissipation are discussed. The origin of flare magnetic fields is considered, along with the thermal distribution, electron density, and high-energy X ray emission of flares. It is suggested that the extreme He-3 enrichment in some solar flares is due to spallation and the subsequent confinement of spallation products in a high-temperature high-density plasma associated with the magnetic instability that produces the flare. A current filament is assumed to produce the spallation and maintain the temperature that yields the high-energy X-ray spectrum and depletes the isotopes D, Li, Be, and B, as observed.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 13, 1977 - Aug 26, 1977; Plovdiv; Bulgaria
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Data on solar flares and perodic particle intensity enhancements in the energy range from 1 to 20 MeV/n are examined. It is found that: (1) Fe/He-4 ratios range from about 1 to 1000 times the solar ratio of 0.0004; (2) these high ratios mitigate against extended storage and large amounts of nuclear processing; (3) the CNO/He-4 ratio has a much smaller range of variability and a mean value of 0.02; (4) large He-3 and Fe enrichments are strongly associated, but not on a one-to-one basis; (5) large Fe enhancements sometimes occur without correspondingly large He-3 enrichments; and (6) none of the models so far advanced adequately explains the observed He-3 and heavy-nucleus enrichments.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 13, 1977 - Aug 26, 1977; Plovdiv; Bulgaria
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