Publication Date:
2019-06-28
Description:
Several hundred radio bursts in the decimetric wavelength range (300-1000 MHz) have been compared with simultaneous soft and hard X-ray (HXR) emission. Long lasting (type IV) radio events have been excluded. The association of decimetric emission with hard X-rays has been found to be surprisingly high (48 percent). The association rate increases with bandwidth, duration, number of structural elements, and maximum frequency. Type III-like bursts are observed up to the upper limit of the observed band. This demonstrates that the corona is transparent up to densities of about 10 to the 10th/cu cm, contrary to previous assumptions. This can only be explained in an inhomogeneous corona with the radio source being located in a dense structure. The short decimetric bursts generally occur during the impulsive phase, i.e., simultaneously with hard X-rays. The times of maximum flux are well correlated (within 2 s). The HXR emission lasts 4 times longer than the radio emission in the average. This work finds a close relationship between decimetric and HXR emission, with sufficient statistics offering additional information on the flare process.
Keywords:
SOLAR PHYSICS
Type:
Solar Physics (ISSN 0038-0938); 97; 159-172
Format:
text