Low Altitude Solar Magnetic Reconnection, Type III Solar Radio Bursts, and X-ray Emissions

Type III solar radio bursts are the Sun's most intense and frequent nonthermal radio emissions. They involve two critical problems in astrophysics, plasma physics, and space physics: how collective processes produce nonthermal radiation and how magnetic reconnection occurs and changes magnetic...

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Main Authors: Cairns, I., Lobzin, V., Donea, A., Tingay, Steven, McCauley, P., Oberoi, D., Duffin, R., Reiner, M., Hurley-Walker, Natasha, Kudryavtseva, N., Melrose, D., Harding, J., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J., Cappallo, R., Corey, B., Deshpande, A., Emrich, David, Goeke, R., Hazelton, B., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D., Kasper, J., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C., Lynch, Mervyn, McWhirter, S., Mitchell, D., Morales, M., Morgan, E., Ord, S., Prabu, T., Roshi, A., Shankar, N., Srivani, K., Subrahmanyan, R., Wayth, Randall, Waterson, M., Webster, R., Whitney, A., Williams, A., Williams, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/65908
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Summary:Type III solar radio bursts are the Sun's most intense and frequent nonthermal radio emissions. They involve two critical problems in astrophysics, plasma physics, and space physics: how collective processes produce nonthermal radiation and how magnetic reconnection occurs and changes magnetic energy into kinetic energy. Here magnetic reconnection events are identified definitively in Solar Dynamics Observatory UV-EUV data, with strong upward and downward pairs of jets, current sheets, and cusp-like geometries on top of time-varying magnetic loops, and strong outflows along pairs of open magnetic field lines. Type III bursts imaged by the Murchison Widefield Array and detected by the Learmonth radiospectrograph and STEREO B spacecraft are demonstrated to be in very good temporal and spatial coincidence with specific reconnection events and with bursts of X-rays detected by the RHESSI spacecraft. The reconnection sites are low, near heights of 5-10 Mm. These images and event timings provide the long-desired direct evidence that semi-relativistic electrons energized in magnetic reconnection regions produce type III radio bursts. Not all the observed reconnection events produce X-ray events or coronal or interplanetary type III bursts; thus different special conditions exist for electrons leaving reconnection regions to produce observable radio, EUV, UV, and X-ray bursts.