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1.
We analyze particle acceleration processes in large solar flares, using observations of the August, 1972, series of large events. The energetic particle populations are estimated from the hard X-ray and γ-ray emission, and from direct interplanetary particle observations. The collisional energy losses of these particles are computed as a function of height, assuming that the particles are accelerated high in the solar atmosphere and then precipitate down into denser layers. We compare the computed energy input with the flare energy output in radiation, heating, and mass ejection, and find for large proton event flares that:
- The ~10–102 keV electrons accelerated during the flash phase constitute the bulk of the total flare energy.
- The flare can be divided into two regions depending on whether the electron energy input goes into radiation or explosive heating. The computed energy input to the radiative quasi-equilibrium region agrees with the observed flare energy output in optical, UV, and EUV radiation.
- The electron energy input to the explosive heating region can produce evaporation of the upper chromosphere needed to form the soft X-ray flare plasma.
- Very intense energetic electron fluxes can provide the energy and mass for interplanetary shock wave by heating the atmospheric gas to energies sufficient to escape the solar gravitational and magnetic fields. The threshold for shock formation appears to be ~1031 ergs total energy in >20 keV electrons, and all of the shock energy can be supplied by electrons if their spectrum extends down to 5–10 keV.
- High energy protons are accelerated later than the 10–102 keV electrons and most of them escape to the interplanetary medium. The energetic protons are not a significant contributor to the energization of flare phenomena. The observations are consistent with shock-wave acceleration of the protons and other nuclei, and also of electrons to relativistic energies.
- The flare white-light continuum emission is consistent with a model of free-bound transitions in a plasma with strong non-thermal ionization produced in the lower solar chromosphere by energetic electrons. The white-light continuum is inconsistent with models of photospheric heating by the energetic particles. A threshold energy of ~5×1030 ergs in >20 keV electrons is required for detectable white-light emission.
2.
- Introduction and Survey. The method for studying the structure and evolution of the solar system is discussed. It is pointed out that theories that account for the origin of planets alone are basically insufficient. Instead one ought to aim for a general theory for the formation of secondary bodies around a central body, applicable both to planet and satellite formation. A satisfactory theory should not start from assumed properties of the primitive Sun, which is a very speculative subject, but should be based on an analysis of present conditions and a successive reconstruction of the past states.
- Orbits of Planets and Satellites. As a foundation for the subsequent analysis, the relevant properties of planets and satellites are presented.
- The Small Bodies. The motion of small bodies is influenced by non-gravitational forces. Collisions (viscosity) are of special importance for the evolution of the orbits. It is pointed out that the focusing property of a gravitational field (which has usually been neglected) leads to the formation of jet streams. The importance of this concept for the understanding of the comet-meteoroid relations and the structure of the asteroidal belt is shown.
- Resonance Structure. A survey is given of the resonances in the solar system and their possible explanation. It is concluded that in many cases the resonances must already be produced at the times when the bodies formed. It is shown that resonance effects put narrow limits on the post-accretional changes of orbits.
- Spin and Tides. Tidal effects on planetary spins and satellite orbits are discussed. It is very doubtful if any satellite except the Moon and possibly Triton has had its orbit changed appreciably by tidal effects. The isochronism of planetary and asteroidal spins is discussed, as well as its bearing on the accretional process.
- Post-accretional Changes in the Solar System. The stability of the solar system and upper limits for changes in orbital and spin data are examined. It is concluded that much of the present dynamic structure has direct relevance to the primordial processes.
3.
Markus J. Aschwanden 《Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy》2008,29(1-2):3-16
Celebrating the diamond jubilee of the Physics Research Laboratory (PRL) in Ahmedabad, India, we look back over the last six decades in solar physics and contemplate on the ten outstanding problems (or research foci) in solar physics:
- The solar neutrino problem
- Structure of the solar interior (helioseismology)
- The solar magnetic field (dynamo, solar cycle, corona)
- Hydrodynamics of coronal loops
- MHD oscillations and waves (coronal seismology)
- The coronal heating problem
- Self-organized criticality (from nanoflares to giant flares)
- Magnetic reconnection processes
- Particle acceleration processes
- Coronal mass ejections and coronal dimming
4.
Populations for the first three bound states and the continuum of hydrogen are determined for an isothermal, hydrostatic atmosphere at 20 000 K. The atmosphere is treated as being optically thin in the Balmer and Paschen continua and illuminated by continuum radiation at these wavelengths with prescribed radiation temperatures. The atmosphere is optically thick in the 2-1, 3-1, 3-2 and c-1 transitions. Three stages of approximation are treated:
- radiative detailed balance in the 2-1, 3-1 and 3-2 transitions,
- radiative detailed balance in the 3-1 and 3-2 transitions, and
- all transitions out of detailed balance.
5.
McWhirter et al. (1975) have presented a standard model for the transition region and inner corona that matches with the Harvard Smithsonian Reference Atmosphere. They assume an open field line configuration and solve numerically the equations of energy and hydrostatic equilibrum. The purpose of the present paper is to generalise their model for the temperature and density as functions of height in several ways and, in particular, to determine the temperature maxium and its location. The effect of varying the following characteristics of the model is determined:
- Boundary conditions on temperature and density;
- magnitude of the heating;
- form of the heating term;
- divergence of the field lines;
- presence of subsonic flows, either upward or downward.
6.
This paper is primarily concerned with the questions of models and the mechanisms of radio emission for pulsars, the polarization of this radiation and related topic. For convenience and to provide a more complete picture of the problems involved, a short summary of the data on pulsars is also given. Besides the introduction, the paper contains the following sections:
- Some Facts about Pulsars.
- The Astrophysical Nature of Pulsars.
- Coherent Mechanisms of Radio Emission from Pulsars.
- Models of Pulsars: Magnetic, Pulsating White Dwarfs and Neutron Stars.
- The Polarization of the Radio Emission from Pulsars.
- A Synthesized Model of Pulsars — Magnetic, Pulsating and Rotating Neutron Stars.
- Concluding Remarks.
7.
The authors present formulas in compact form for constructing high order planetary perturbations with respect to the disturbing masses. They have been built by an iterative process and give the variations of osculating elements. Singularities due to vanishing eccentricities and inclinations are not present in the differential equations. All elementary operations are manipulations of Fourier series with numerical coefficients, and great care has been taken to economize algebraic operations. Results are presented in three forms:
- vectorial form, with real components which may be useful in numerical integrations;
- complex form, to put in evidence the symmetries of the system of variables;
- scalar form, which is the most elaborate. This last form has been used for constructing the first order perturbations for any pair of planets. Two illustrations are given (Jupiter and Saturn, Venus and Earth). Further remarks are made about the practical manipulation of Fourier series, resolution of Kepler's equation in complex form and construction by iteration of the inverse of the distance between two bodies.
8.
Markus J. Aschwanden 《Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy》2008,29(1-2):115-124
The Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE) gave us the highest EUV spatial resolution and the Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectrometric Imager (RHESSI) gave us the highest hard X-ray and gammaray spectral resolution to study solar flares. We review a number of recent highlights obtained from both missions that either enhance or challenge our physical understanding of solar flares, such as:
- Multi-thermal Diagnostic of 6.7 and 8.0 keV Fe and Ni lines
- Multi-thermal Conduction Cooling Delays
- Chromospheric Altitude of Hard X-Ray Emission
- Evidence for Dipolar Reconnection Current Sheets
- Footpoint Motion and Reconnection Rate
- Evidence for Tripolar Magnetic Reconnection
- Displaced Electron and Ion Acceleration Sources.
9.
The properties of rapidly changing inhomogeneities visible in the H and K lines above sunspot umbrae are described. We find as properties for these ‘Umbral Flashes’:
- A lifetime of 50 sec. The light curve is asymmetrical, the increase is faster than the decrease in brightness.
- A diameter ranging from the resolution limit up to 2000 km.
- A tendency to repeat every 145 sec.
- A ‘proper motion’ of 40 km/sec generally directed towards the penumbra.
- A Doppler shift of 6 km/sec.
- A magnetic field of 2100 G.
- A decrease in this field of 12 G/sec. This decrease is probably related to the flash motion.
- At any instant an average of 3–5 flashes in a medium-sized umbra. A weak feature often persists in the umbra after the flash. This post-flash structure initially shows a blue shift, but 100–120 sec after the flash, it shows a rapid red shift just before the flash repeats.
10.
Peter Wasilewski 《Earth, Moon, and Planets》1974,11(3-4):301-311
Electron microscopy has confirmed the existence of both body centered cubic (BBC)-α metal and face centered cubic (FCC)-γ metal in lunar fines and breccia samples. Under appropriate conditions of composition, size, and other constraints iron-nickel alloys can exist as FCC phases over the entire range from 0 to 100% nickel. Lunar rock magnetism research has not generally considered the implications of structures, mechanisms, crystallography, and possible interaction effects in fine particle metal. FCC metal is antiferromagnetic (? 30 wt % nickel) and would be measured in the paramagnetic component, showing a cryogenic temperature Neel point; only BCC metal would figure in the estimation of the free iron content based on saturation magnetization measurements. Evidence is presented for changes in saturation magnetization, magnetic remanence, and coercivity, and for the introduction of magnetic anisotropy when FCC metal transforms to BCC metal. From the results in the published metallurgical literature it is inferred that the induced magnetic anisotropy observed during plastic deformation of fine FCC iron precipitates in a copper matrix is associated with uniaxial development of BCC plates in the FCC precipitate. Directional impulse or any uniaxial deformation may produce magnetic anisotropy if FCC metal is made to transform to BCC metal (theγ→α M transformation), and there will be an angular dependence for remanence acquisition, because of shape, which must be considered in paleointensity determinations. It should be noted that the transformation can be activated at any temperature below the Curie point of the BCC metal High field rotational hysteresis (Wr) has been measured in lunar fines and rocks, indicating that exchange anisotropy and/or ferromagnetic minerals with large uniaxial anisotropy exist in the lunar samples. The following are possible sources of the hysteresis:
- Fine intergrowths of spinels or other nonequilibrium phase intergrowths developed during subsolidus reduction;
- Fine particle intergrowths of iron and iron sulfide;
- Iron and wustite or magnetite due to fine particle oxidation;
- Ferromagnetic (BCC) and antiferromagnetic (FCC) metallic intergrowths.
11.
Tadashi Hirayama 《Solar physics》1971,17(1):50-75
Two-dimensional distributions of kinetic temperature, density and turbulent velocity are obtained for four quiescent prominences observed at the Peruvian eclipse of 12 November, 1966.
- The kinetic temperature derived from line widths is around 6000–7000 K in the central part of prominences and rises to 12000K in both edges and possibly in the top of prominences.
- The turbulent velocity shows a similar tendency, being 7–9 km/sec in the central part and ≈ 20 km/sec in the outer part. The turbulent velocity also increases slowly towards higher heights in the prominence.
- The electron density derived both from the Stark effect and the intensity ratio of the continuous spectra turns out to be about 1010.2–1010.6 cm?3 in the central portion of two prominences.
- From the width and the intensity, neutral helium lines are shown to originate in the same region as hydrogen and metallic lines where the kinetic temperature goes down to 6000 K. This indicates that neutral helium is emitted after the ionization due to UV radiation from the corona and the transition region.
12.
The properties of small (< 2″) moving magnetic features near certain sunspots are studied with several time series of longitudinal magnetograms and Hα filtergrams. We find that the moving magnetic features:
- Are associated only with decaying sunspots surrounded entirely or in part by a zone without a permanent vertical magnetic field.
- Appear first at or slightly beyond the outer edge of the parent sunspot regardless of the presence or absence of a penumbra.
- Move approximately radially outward from sunspots at about 1 km s?1 until they vanish or reach the network.
- Appear with both magnetic polarities from sunspots of single polarities but appear with a net flux of the same sign as the parent sunspot.
- Transport net flux away from the parent sunspots at the same rates as the flux decay of the sunspots.
- Tend to appear in opposite polarity pairs.
- Appear to carry a total flux away from sunspots several times larger than the total flux of the sunspots.
- Produce only a very faint emmission in the core of Hα.
13.
D. Bhaumik J. N. Chakravorty S. K. Midya S. Chakraborty 《Earth, Moon, and Planets》1996,74(2):115-121
Evening twilight airglow emissions of OH (7,2) band and Li 6708 Å are observed by Dunn-Manring type photometer and following important results are obtained.
- Intensity of OH (7,2) and Li (6708 Å) decrease exponentially during evening twilight period.
- OH (7,2) band covaries with Li (6708 Å) during evening twilight period.
- Empirical equations of OH (7,2) band with time is obtained.
- Possible explanations of such type of variations is also presented.
14.
Franca Chiuderi Drago 《Solar physics》1970,13(2):357-371
The results of the total solar eclipse of November 12, 1966, observed at 8 different wave-lengths between 3 and 21 cm, are studied and the spectrum of two active regions present on the disk is deduced. It is shown that the observed increase of the flux of the most intense source in the range 3–10 cm is due to geometrical effects. Neglecting the influence of the magnetic field, the following quantities are deduced.
- the mean and central temperature of the coronal condensation.
- the ∫ corona N 2dh (N = electron density).
15.
We have investigated how the gradients of temperature and expansion velocities will change the emergent profiles from an extended medium in spherical symmetry. Variation of the source function and expansion velocities are assumed. The following variations of temperature are employed:
- T(r) ; T0 (isothermal case)
- T(r) ; T0(r/r0)1/2
- T(r) ; T0(r/r0)-1
- T(r) ; T0(r/r0)-2
- T(r) ; T0(r/r0)-3
16.
Correlation and spectral analysis of solar radio flux density and sunspot number near the maximum of the sunspot cycle has indicated the existence of
- long period amplitude modulation of the slowly varying component (SVC) of radio emission
- coronal storage over a period of the order of three solar rotations
- fast decay (one solar rotation period or less) of gyromagnetic emissions from radio sources
- shift in location of chromospheric sources compared to those of either the upper corona or the photosphere.
17.
Hot spots similar to those in the radio galaxy Cygnus A can be explained by the strong shock produced by a supersonic but classical jet \(\left( {u_{jet}< c/\sqrt 3 } \right)\) . The high integrated radio luminosity (L?2×1044 erg s?1) and the strength of mean magnetic field (B?2×10?4 G) suggest the hot spots are the downstream flow of a very strong shock which generates the ultrarelativistic electrons of energy ?≥20 MeV. The fully-developed subsonic turbulence amplifies the magnetic field of the jet up to 1.6×10?4 G by the dynamo effect. If we assume that the post-shock pressure is dominated by relativistic particles, the ratio between the magnetic energy density to the energy density in relativistic particles is found to be ?2×10?2, showing that the generally accepted hypothesis of equipartition is not valid for hot spots. The current analysis allows the determination of physical parameters inside hot spots. It is found that:
- The velocity of the upstream flow in the frame of reference of the shock isu 1?0.2c. Radio observations indicate that the velocity of separation of hot spots isu sep?0.05c, so that the velocity of the jet isu jet=u 1+u sep?0.25c.
- The density of the thermal electrons inside the hot spot isn 2?5×10?3 e ? cm?3 and the mass ejected per year to power the hot spot is ?4M 0yr?1.
- The relativistic electron density is less than 20% of the thermal electron density inside the hot spot and the spectrum is a power law which continues to energies as low as 30 MeV.
- The energy density of relativistic protons is lower than the energy density of relativistic electrons unlike the situation for cosmic rays in the Galaxy.
18.
Improving our understanding of the mechanisms that energize the solar wind and heat structures in the solar corona requires the development of empirical methods that can determine the three-dimensional (3D) temperature and density distributions with as much spatial and temporal resolution as possible. This paper reviews the solar rotational tomography (SRT) methods that will be used for 3D reconstruction of the solar corona from data obtained by the next generation of space-based missions such as the Solar and Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO), Solar-B and the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). In the next decade, SRT will undergo rapid advancement on several frontiers of 3D image reconstruction:
- Electron density reconstruction from white-light coronagraph images.
- Differential emission measure (DEM) reconstruction from EUV images.
- Dual-spacecraft (STEREO) observing geometry.
- Fusion of data from multiple spacecraft with differing instrumentation.
- Time-dependent estimation methods.
19.
Dwarf elliptical (dE) galaxies, with blue absolute magnitudes typically fainter than MB =?16, are the most numerous type of galaxy in the nearby universe. Tremendous advances have been made over the past several years in delineating the properties of both Local Group satellite dE's and the large dE populations of nearby clusters. We review some of these advances, with particular attention to how well currently available data can constrain
- models for the formation of dE's
- the physical and evolutionary connections between different types of galaxies (nucleated and nonnucleated dE's, compact E's, irregulars, and blue compact dwarfs) that overlap in the same portion of the mass-spectrum of galaxies
- the contribution of dE's to the galaxy luminosity functions in clusters and the field
- the star-forming histories of dE's and their possible contribution to faint galaxy counts, and
- the clustering properties of dE's.
20.
N. I. Shakhovskaya 《Solar physics》1989,121(1-2):375-386
The observational data permit us to establish clear statistical correlations between different parameters of stellar flare activity and the characteristics of quiet stars. These relations are:
- between energies and frequencies of flares on stars of different luminosities;
- between total radiation energies of flares and quiet stars both in X-ray and Balmer emission lines;
- between flare decay rates just after the maxima and flare luminosities at maxima.