Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Radio Diagnostics of Energetic Electrons from Solar Flares, CMEs and Shocks: Nicole Vilmer LESIA Observatoire de Paris UMR 8109 CNRS, UPMC, Université.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Radio Diagnostics of Energetic Electrons from Solar Flares, CMEs and Shocks: Nicole Vilmer LESIA Observatoire de Paris UMR 8109 CNRS, UPMC, Université."— Presentation transcript:

1 Radio Diagnostics of Energetic Electrons from Solar Flares, CMEs and Shocks: Nicole Vilmer LESIA Observatoire de Paris UMR 8109 CNRS, UPMC, Université Paris-Diderot ESPM 14 8-12 SEPTEMBER 2014 TRINITY COLLEGE DUBLIN DUBLIN

2 Electromagnetic radiation from energetic electrons Dauphin et al., 2005 X-rays Microwaves Gyrosynchrotron Emissions Meter waves Plasma emissions Energetic electrons from the active Sun produce electromagnetic radiation in a very extended domain : X-ray and Gamma-ray emissions Radio emissions in the 10 kHz to >500 GHz domain I Im f b (Hz ) = 2.8 1B (G) f p (kHz ) =9  n e cm - 3

3 INPUT of RADIO OBSERVATIONS in the GHz-MHz range to SOLAR and HELIOSPHERIC PHYSICS - What are the physical mechanisms leading to particle acceleration? - What are the physical mechanisms leading to instabilities and eruptive activity in the coronal plasma? 1 GHz 100 MHz 10 MHz 1 MHz

4 INPUT of RADIO OBSERVATIONS in the 1 GHz-1 MHz range to SOLAR and HELIOSPHERIC PHYSICS P lasma radio emissions from « non-thermal » electrons predominant below 1 GHz Particle acceleration in flares and CMEs Propagation of particles from the acceleration site to the interplanetary medium Triggering and evolution of coronal mass ejections and shocks in the low corona Radio emissions are TRACERS of dynamical processes (e.g. shocks) and of electron propagation in the corona and interplanetary medium. Type III ( e beams) Type II (shock) Wind/WAVES (satellite) Nançay DAM Nançay ORFEES Spectral identification of imaged radio sources Nançay NRH 150 MHz Positions (2X1D) of radio sources http://radio-monitoring.obspm.fr/index.php

5 f p = 9 √ N e (kHz) cm -3 Radio emissions in the corona 2 Rs NRH LOFAR VLA, OVSA CSRH 327 MHz 237 MHz 164 MHz

6 Radio diagnostics of electron beams Radio diagnostics of electron beams acceleration sites? acceleration sites? propagation in the corona, in the interplanetary medium? propagation in the corona, in the interplanetary medium? Injection from the flare site to the IP medium? Injection from the flare site to the IP medium? Radio diagnostics of shocks and CMEs Radio diagnostics of shocks and CMEs acceleration sites? acceleration sites? origin of the shock wave? origin of the shock wave?

7 ~10000 types III « bursts » observed by the NRH in the frequency range 450-150 MHz from 1998 to 2008 (Saint-Hilaire, et al., 2013) Statistical studies on « coronal » type III bursts: flux distributions Number of type III events in 3 months (with NRH observations) Blue: f 10.7 index (SFU) Red: Sunspot number

8 Statistical studies on « coronal » type III bursts: Very close to results for radio bursts at higher frequencies (above 1GHz) slope of (-1.8) (Nita et al., 2002) Variation of radio flux with frequency (See also results on a type III burst between 3-50 MHz (Dulk et al., 2001 ) Constraints to type III emission models? dN/dS= 0.34 ν −2:9 S −1.7 sfu -1 day -1 (( sfu−1 day−1

9 Coronal and Interplanetary type III bursts? What about interplanetary type III bursts? ? 156 interplanetary Type III bursts with Stereo Peak at 1 MHz for 156 type III bursts observed with STEREO (see Krupar et al., 2014)

10 Electron acceleration sites? ARE THE TYPE III GENERATING ELECTRONS A PART OF THE SAME POPULATION AS HXR GENERATING ELECTRONS? A question debated for many years: (e.g. Kane, 1971; 1981; Raoult et al., 1985, Hamilton, et al., 1995; Aschwanden et al., 1995; Benz et al., 2005; 2007) Some Recent Results! Some Recent Results!

11 Radio and X-ray diagnostics of flare energetic electrons Vilmer et al. 2002 RADIO X-RAYS One of the cartoon (how common?) Electrons travelling downwards into the chromosphere radiate X-rays in dense (n e =10 12 cm -3 ) plasma via Bremsstrahlung. Detected X-rays are usually in the 6-100 keV energy range Electrons travelling upwards can induce Langmuir waves which in turn produce coherent radio emission (type III) in the rarefied (n e <10 9 cm -3 ) coronal and interplanetary plasma. Detected radio frequencies are from around 400 MHz down to 2 MHZ Standard picture ? Electron acceleration in the corona Propagation both upwards and downwards. NRH and RHESSI observations

12 ARE THE TYPE III GENERATING ELECTRONS A PART OF THE SAME POPULATION AS HXR GENERATING ELECTRONS? For some events : YES See correlations between type III starting frequencies and HXR spectral index Starting frequency of the radio type III burst (red) and HXR spectral index (green) Reid, et al. 2011 See also Raoult et al., 1985

13 ARE THE TYPE III GENERATING ELECTRONS A PART OF THE SAME POPULATION AS HXR GENERATING ELECTRONS? For some events : YES Is it the common rule? Systematic search using RHESSI flare list and PHOENIX 2 catalogue of type III bursts 30 events between 2002 and 2009 17/30 events (50% ) with correlations Use of a density model (exponential model derived from Saint Hilaire et al., 2013) to change frequency to height and thick target model to go from HXR spectral index to electron spectral index. Conclusion: For half of the events type III generating electrons are part of the same population as HXR generating electrons- CC=-0.86 Reid et al., 2014 CC=0.85

14 Deducing the characteristics of acceleration region: height and size d using combined radio and X-ray observations and numerical simulations (Reid et al., 2011, 2014) 10 events: h (acceleration height) in the 25Mm to 180 Mm range d (acceleration size) in the 2.1 to 16 Mm Conclusion: Extended acceleration region «high » in the corona BUT flares with open field lines (metric type III burts) What are the characteristics of the acceleration region? From X-rays time of flight measurements H~ 20 Mm (see Aschwanden et al., 1998)) Need of future imaging spectroscopy < 500 MHz (e.g. Chinese Solar RadioHeliograph, FASR,…)

15 Tracing electron beams in the corona with radio dynamics imaging spectroscopy First observations of type IIIdm bursts 1-2 GHz With the new technique of radio dynamic imaging spectroscopy recently upgraded Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA). (Chen et al., 2013) Energy release height < 15 Mm Note the spread of Positions at a given f injection of electron beams in a fibrous corona D<100 km More to be learnt with the CSRH…

16 Tracing the path of electron beams in the corona to the IP medium NRH flux RHESSI flux Radio spectrum Do all coronal type III bursts have X-ray counterparts? 30% to 50% of type III events (only type III emissions) havea ssociated hard X-ray flares. Do all coronal type III bursts have an interplanetary counterpart? 50% of events have emission < 14 MHz Bias for the more intense events having interplanetary emission Study based on >1000 type III bursts over 10 years of data See poster by Reid,Vilmer

17 Flare Morphology The “ standard” flare model is very simplified. The reality is more complicated Particles can be injected into different magnetic structures during the course of a flare. This can influence whether the electron beam makes it into interplanetary space.

18 Tracing radio emitting electron beams in the corona to the IP medium LOFAR observations of type III radio burts at 50-55 MHz, 40-45 MHz and 30-35 MHz (tied-array mode) see Morosan et al., 2014 and talk Type III sources at the flank of the CME Another site of electron acceleration … Also seen at lower frequencies…

19 Radio diagnostics of electron beams Radio diagnostics of electron beams acceleration sites? acceleration sites? propagation in the corona, in the interplanetary medium? propagation in the corona, in the interplanetary medium? Injection from the flare site to the IP medium? Injection from the flare site to the IP medium? Radio diagnostics of energetic electrons from CMEs and shocks Radio diagnostics of energetic electrons from CMEs and shocks acceleration sites? acceleration sites? origin of the shock wave? origin of the shock wave?

20 Where are the electron acceleration sites in the corona? Role of the Coronal Mass Ejection CME development and propagation CME interaction with other magnetic structures (open B lines, streamers) for the production of energetic electrons Related to the shock wave?? (1) In the reconnection sheet formed below the CME?? (2) In the interaction regions during the evolution of the magnetic features ?? (3) INPUT OF RADIO IMAGES… Adapted from Démoulin et al., 2012 1 1 2 3

21 Electron acceleration in current Sheets in flares and CMEs Evidence from Spectrography Multifrequency imaging Reconnection Pick, Démoulin et al., 2005 Kliem, et al. 2000, Karlicky et al., 2002, 2004 S M Quasi periodic episodes from magnetic reconnection in CS

22 Evidence for electron acceleration due to CME interaction Electron acceleration (type III bursts) due to reconnection at the lateral flanks of CMEs Démoulin et al., 2012 Type III position at 164 MHz and movement Radio CME Electron acceleration (herringbones) due to shock acceleration at the lateral flank of the CME Carley et al., 2013 Positions of the bursty source at 150 MHz

23 - Shock in flares and CMEs Coronal type II bursts: signature of MHD shock waves (Wild & Smerd, 1972; Mann, 1995; Cairns 2011,…) Origin of the coronal shock wave? Flare blast wave Piston driven shock (eruptive magnetoplasma) structure A lot of discussions(Aurass 1997; Cliver et al., 1999; Vrsnak & Cliver 2008,…) Need to study the relative positions of radio type II sources and eruptive plasma But very few observations of type II bursts starting at high enough frequencies to compare positions of radio type II sources (e.g. with the NRH) with the positions of eruptive plasmas (seen in X-ray, EUV) A few studied cases of type II bursts starting at HF (~ 500 MHz) Gopalswamy et al., 1997; Klein et al., 1999; Dauphin et al., 2006, Magdalenic et al., 2010, Magdalenic et al., 2012; Bain et al., 2012; Zimovets et al;, 2012; Zucca et al., 2014 & posters Klein et al., 1999

24 3 Positions of radio sources at the beginning of the type II emission at each frequency Source at 432 MHz above the LE of hot plasma Increase of the distance between the LE and the type II positions at lower frequencies Origin of the shock in the low corona Zimovets et al., 2012 Hot Hot plasma centroid /leading edge 500 km/s Type II 1500- 2000km/s Warm plasma 1100 km/s

25 Origin of the shock in the low corona Flare blast wave or piston driven? Two strong evidences in favour of the piston-driven shock wave scenario for this case: -location of the type-II burst source above the apex of the eruptive plasma leading edge -similar propagation direction of the type II and LE of the eruptive plasma But: how to explain the difference between the velocity of Leading edge of the eruptive plasma and the velocity of the shock (type II sources)? See e.g. numerical simulations of the propagation of a shock wave in a gravitationally stratified corona the shock wave (once created) can propagate faster through the corona than its driver. (piston driven and then freely propagating blast wave) See also very recent Type II/CME/ejecta observations by Carley, Pick (posters) Pomoell et al., 2008 FR shock

26 Origin of the shock in the interplanetary medium General agreement on the origin of Interplanetary Shocks (IP shocks): CME driven (Cane et al. 1987; Gopalswamy et al., 2000) Where are the radio type II sources in the IP Medium?? -Positions derived through triangulation of emissions observed by 2 spacecrafts ( STEREO B and WIND ) from 625 to 425 kHz -3D reconstruction of the CME (SOHO, STEREO) Magdalenic et al., 2014 The source of the type II burst is at the southern flank of the CME! Close to the location of the interaction of the CME/shock and nearby coronal streamer!! Observations of type II sources with LOFAR?? Magdalenic et al., 2014 See also talk by Susino

27 Radio Diagnostics of Energetic Electrons from Solar Flares, CMEs and Shocks Radio emissions (1GHz-100 kHz) are TRACERS of dynamical processes (e.g. shocks) and of electron propagation in the corona and interplanetary medium Electron acceleration sites? Acceleration regions deduced from x-rays, radio imaging at 1 GHz<15 Mm, Combined X-ray/ radio observations (25 -200 Mm) BUT NO Images yet of the acceleration sites Input of radio images and spectra below 500 MHz! CSRH, FASR, other decimetric radioheliographs?) Role of the CME development and interaction with ambient magnetic structure Different sites for electron acceleration (in extended CS below the CME flux rope, in interaction regions with surrounding B fields ? Formation of the shock ? Input of radio images below 100 MHz (LOFAR observations) Combination with space missions


Download ppt "Radio Diagnostics of Energetic Electrons from Solar Flares, CMEs and Shocks: Nicole Vilmer LESIA Observatoire de Paris UMR 8109 CNRS, UPMC, Université."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google