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Radio Observations of a Massive, Slow-Moving Ejection of Coronal Material

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2016

K. V. Sheridan
Affiliation:
Division of Radiophysics, CSIRO, Sydney
B. V. Jackson
Affiliation:
Division of Radiophysics, CSIRO, Sydney
D. J. McLean
Affiliation:
Division of Radiophysics, CSIRO, Sydney
G. A. Dulk
Affiliation:
Division of Radiophysics, CSIRO, Sydney

Extract

Studies of coronal transients observed in white-light (Gosling et al., 1976) have shown that fast-moving events (≤ 400 km s-1) are closely associated with flares and with type II and IV radio bursts while slow-moving events are not. We now report the first detection of the radio counterpart of a slow-moving transient. The event of 1974 January 21 is shown to be visible on maps of the quiet Sun made at a frequency of 80 MHz.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of Australia 1978

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References

Gosling, J. T., Hildner, E., MacQueen, R. M., Munro, R. H., Poland, A. I., and Ross, C. L., J. Geophys. Res., 79, 4581 (1974).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, B. V., ‘Coronal mass increases prior to Hα eruptions from the Sun’ — to be submitted to Solar Phys. (1978).Google Scholar
Jackson, B. V., and Hildner, E., ‘Forerunners: The outer rim of solar coronal transient events’ — submitted to Solar Phys. (1978).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saito, K., Poland, A. I., and Munro, R. H., Solar Phys., 55, 121 (1977).CrossRefGoogle Scholar