Langmuir Waves and Type III Bursts Observed by the Wind Spacecraft

Author(s):  
Sonja Vidojević ◽  
Arnaud Zaslavsky ◽  
Milan Maksimovic ◽  
Olga Atanacković ◽  
Sang Hoang ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Vidojević ◽  
A. Zaslavsky ◽  
M. Maksimović ◽  
M. Dražić ◽  
O. Atanacković

AbstractInterplanetary electron beams are unstable in the solar wind and they generate Langmuir waves at the local plasma frequency or its harmonic. Radio observations of the waves in the range 4-256 kHz, observed in 1994-2010 with the WAVES experiment onboard the WIND spacecraft, are statistically analyzed. A subset of 36 events with Langmuir waves and type III bursts occurring at the same time was selected. After removal of the background, the remaining power spectral density is modeled by the Pearson system of probability distributions (types I, IV and VI). The Stochastic Growth Theory (SGT) predicts log-normal distribution for the power spectrum density of the Langmuir waves. Our results indicate that SGT possibly requires further verification.


1980 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 315-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Suzuki ◽  
G.A. Dulk ◽  
K. V. Sheridan

We report on the positional and polarization characteristics of Type III bursts in the range 24–220 MHz as measured by the Culgoora radioheliograph, spectrograph and spectropolarimeter. Our study includes 997 bursts which are of two classes: fundamental-harmonic (F-H) pairs and “structureless” bursts with no visible F-H structure. In a paper published elsewhere (Dulk and Suzuki, 1979) we give a detailed description and include observations of source sizes, heights and brightness temperatures. Here we concentrate on the polarization of the bursts and the variation of polarization from centre to limb. The observed centre-to-limb decrease in polarization approximately follows a cosine law. This decrease is not as predicted by simple theory but is consistent with other observations which imply that open field lines from an active region diverge strongly. The observed o-mode polarization of harmonic radiation implies that the wave vectors of Langmuir waves are always parallel, within about 20°, to the magnetic field, while the constancy of H polarization with frequency implies that the ratio fB/fP, the Alfvén speed vA and the plasma beta are constant with height on the open field lines above an active region. Finally, we infer that some factor, in addition to the magnetic field strength, controls the polarization of F radiation.


2004 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 411-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Thejappa ◽  
R. J. MacDowall

Abstract. Short wavelength ion sound waves (2-4kHz) are detected in association with the Langmuir waves (~15-30kHz) in the source regions of several local type III radio bursts. They are most probably not due to any resonant wave-wave interactions such as the electrostatic decay instability because their wavelengths are much shorter than those of Langmuir waves. The Langmuir waves occur as coherent field structures with peak intensities exceeding the Langmuir collapse thresholds. Their scale sizes are of the order of the wavelength of an ion sound wave. These Langmuir wave field characteristics indicate that the observed short wavelength ion sound waves are most probably generated during the thermalization of the burnt-out cavitons left behind by the Langmuir collapse. Moreover, the peak intensities of the observed short wavelength ion sound waves are comparable to the expected intensities of those ion sound waves radiated by the burnt-out cavitons. However, the speeds of the electron beams derived from the frequency drift of type III radio bursts are too slow to satisfy the needed adiabatic ion approximation. Therefore, some non-linear process such as the induced scattering on thermal ions most probably pumps the beam excited Langmuir waves towards the lower wavenumbers, where the adiabatic ion approximation is justified.


1972 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 523-543
Author(s):  
G. Berthomieu

It has been proposed by Smith that type III radio bursts may be produced by streams of protons with radius of the order of 7 km, which is of the same order as the characteristic lengths of the nonlinear processes which are supposed to take place in the dynamics of these bursts. In this paper, we consider a method for studying systems with finite transverse dimensions and apply it to a simple model: the scattering of a beam of plasma waves by acoustic turbulence and by the particles of the plasma.


1974 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 285-287
Author(s):  
D. B. Melrose

(Solar Phys.). The widely accepted emission mechanisms for type III bursts involve at least two stages. The first stage is the generation of Langmuir waves by the inferred stream of electrons. Emission at the fundamental frequency arises when these waves are scattered by thermal ions. Emission at the second harmonic arises when two Langmuir waves coalesce; however, the coalescence is possible only after an intermediate stage in which the distribution of Langmuir waves evolves towards isotropy due to scattering by thermal ions.


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