Litcius/Paper detail

Incoherent Solar Radio Emission

A. Nindos

2020Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Incoherent solar radio radiation comes from the free-free, gyroresonance, and gyrosynchrotron emission mechanisms. Free-free is primarily produced from Coulomb collisions between thermal electrons and ions. Gyroresonance and gyrosynchrotron result from the acceleration of low-energy electrons and mildly relativistic electrons, respectively, in the presence of a magnetic field. In the non-flaring Sun, free-free is the dominant emission mechanism with the exception of regions of strong magnetic fields which emit gyroresonance at microwaves. Due to its ubiquitous presence, free-free emission can be used to probe the non-flaring solar atmosphere above temperature minimum. Gyroresonance opacity depends strongly on the magnetic field strength and orientation; hence it provides a unique tool for the estimation of coronal magnetic fields. Gyrosynchrotron is the primary emission mechanism in flares at frequencies higher than 1-2 GHz and depends on the properties of both the magnetic field and the accelerated electrons, as well as the properties of the ambient plasma. In this paper we discuss in detail the above mechanisms and their diagnostic potential.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsElectronSolar flareMagnetic fieldAstrophysicsSolar physicsFree electron modelPlasmaMagnetic reconnectionOpacityAtomic physicsOpticsNuclear physicsQuantum mechanicsSolar and Space Plasma DynamicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsAstro and Planetary Science