Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1763514 | Advances in Space Research | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Analysis of the solar event on 16 February 2011 (SOL2011-02-16T14:19) allows to classify it as an “impulsive” coronal mass ejection (CME) event. It is argued that the observed deviation of a streamer ray from its pre-event state and generation of a metric type II radio burst in this event was a result of a “CME-streamer” interaction in the lower corona (râ²1.5Râ). Most probably, it was a consequence of an impulsive action of a compressed magnetic field to the streamer. This compression of the coronal magnetic field was due to a moving and expanding magnetic flux rope, which was a core of the CME. The estimated radial speed of the type II burst sources was significantly (â2-8 times) larger than the radial speed of the erupting flux rope, and it decreased rapidly with time. This indicates that during the “CME-streamer” interaction a blast shock wave could be excited and propagated along the streamer.
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Space and Planetary Science
Authors
V.G. Eselevich, M.V. Eselevich, V.M. Sadykov, I.V. Zimovets,