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The Low-Frequency Solar Corona in Circular Polarization

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 Added by Patrick McCauley
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present spectropolarimetric imaging observations of the solar corona at low frequencies (80 - 240 MHz) using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). These images are the first of their kind, and we introduce an algorithm to mitigate an instrumental artefact by which the total intensity signal contaminates the polarimetric images due to calibration errors. We then survey the range of circular polarization (Stokes V) features detected in over 100 observing runs near solar maximum during quiescent periods. First, we detect around 700 compact polarized sources across our dataset with polarization fractions ranging from less than 0.5% to nearly 100%. These sources exhibit a positive correlation between polarization fraction and total intensity, and we interpret them as a continuum of plasma emission noise storm (Type I burst) continua sources associated with active regions. Second, we report a characteristic bullseye structure observed for many low-latitude coronal holes in which a central polarized component is surrounded by a ring of the opposite sense. The central component does not match the sign expected from thermal bremsstrahlung emission, and we speculate that propagation effects or an alternative emission mechanism may be responsible. Third, we show that the large-scale polarimetric structure at our lowest frequencies is reasonably well-correlated with the line-of-sight (LOS) magnetic field component inferred from a global potential field source surface (PFSS) model. The boundaries between opposite circular polarization signs are generally aligned with polarity inversion lines in the model at a height roughly corresponding to that of the radio limb. This is not true at our highest frequencies, however, where the LOS magnetic field direction and polarization sign are often not straightforwardly correlated.

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327 - Patrick I. McCauley 2019
Low-frequency (80-240 MHz) radio observations of the solar corona are presented using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA), and several discoveries are reported. The corona is reviewed, followed by chapters on Type III bursts and circularly-polarized quiescent emission. The second chapter details new Type III burst dynamics. One source component at higher frequencies splits into two at lower frequencies, where the two components rapidly diverge. This is attributed to electron beams traversing a divergent magnetic field configuration, which is supported by extreme ultraviolet jet observations outlining a coronal null point. The third chapter uses Type III burst heights as density probes. Harmonic plasma emission implies ~4x enhancements over background models. This can be explained by electron beams traveling along dense fibers or by propagation effects that elevate apparent source heights. The quiescent corona is compared to model predictions to conclude that propagation effects can largely but not entirely explain the apparent density enhancements. The fourth chapter surveys over 100 spectropolarimetric observing runs. Around 700 compact sources are detected with polarization fractions from less than 0.5% to nearly 100%. They are interpreted as plasma emission noise storm sources down to levels not previously observable. A bullseye structure is reported for coronal holes, where an outer ring surrounds an oppositely-polarized central component that does not match the sign expected of thermal bremsstrahlung. The large-scale polarization structure is shown to be well-correlated with that of a global magnetic field model. The last chapter summarizes results and outlines future work. A preliminary comparison of polarization images to model predictions is shared, along with coronal mass ejection observations revealing a radio arc that is morphologically similar to the white-light structure.
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