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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
The interpretation of ground based observations of solar “plasma frequency” radio bursts has been hampered in the past by an insufficient knowledge of coronal scattering by density inhomogeneities close to the sun. Calculations based on measurements of the angular broadening of natural radio sources, and Woo's 1975 measurement of the angular broadening of the telemetry carrier of Helios I near occultation (Woo, 1978), indicate that plasma frequency solar bursts should undergo considerable scattering, at least near the maximum of the sunspot cycle. The calculated displacements of the apparent positions of the bursts are about equal to the observed displacements which have been attributed to the bursts occurring in dense streamers. In order to obtain more scattering data close to the sun, interferometer measurements of the angular broadening of spacecraft signals are planned, and the important contribution which could be made with large dishes is discussed.