Parametric simulation studies on the wave propagation of solar radio emission: the source size, duration, and position

Zhang, P., Wang, C. and Kontar, E. P. (2021) Parametric simulation studies on the wave propagation of solar radio emission: the source size, duration, and position. Astrophysical Journal, 909(2), 195. (doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/abd8c5)

[img] Text
237507.pdf - Accepted Version

1MB

Abstract

The observed features of the radio source indicate that the waves of solar radio bursts are convoluted with complex propagation effects. In this work, we perform ray-tracing simulations on radio wave transport in the corona and interplanetary region with anisotropic electron density fluctuations. For the first time, the variation of the apparent source size, burst duration, and source position for the fundamental emission and harmonic emission at the frequency of 35 MHz are simulated as a function of the anisotropic parameter α and the angular scattering rate coefficient η = epsilon2/h0, where epsilon2 = 〈δn2〉/n2 is the density fluctuation level and h0 is its correlation length near the wave excitation site. It is found that isotropic fluctuations produce a much larger decay time than a highly anisotropic fluctuation for fundamental emission. By comparing the observed duration and source size with the simulation results in the parameter space, we can estimate the scattering coefficient and the anisotropic parameter η = 8.9 × 10−5 km−1 and α = 0.719 with a point pulse source assumption. Position offsets due to wave scattering and refraction can produce the co-spatial of the fundamental and harmonic waves in the observation of some type III radio bursts. The visual speed due to the wave propagation effect can reach 1.5c for η = 2.4 × 10−4 km−1 and α = 0.2 for the fundamental emission in the sky plane, accompanied with large expansion rate of the source size. The direction of the visual speed is mostly identical to the direction of the offset, thus, for the observation aimed at obtaining the source position, the source centroid at the starting time is closer to the wave excitation site.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Kontar, Professor Eduard
Authors: Zhang, P., Wang, C., and Kontar, E. P.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Physics and Astronomy
Journal Name:Astrophysical Journal
Publisher:IOP Publishing
ISSN:0004-637X
ISSN (Online):1538-4357
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2021 The American Astronomical Society
First Published:First published in Astrophysical Journal 909(2): 195
Publisher Policy:Reproduced in accordance with the publisher copyright policy

University Staff: Request a correction | Enlighten Editors: Update this record