VLA Measurements of Faraday Rotation through Coronal Mass Ejections

Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are large-scale eruptions of plasma from the Sun, which play an important role in space weather. Faraday rotation is the rotation of the plane of polarization that results when a linearly polarized signal passes through a magnetized plasma such as a CME. Faraday rotatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Solar physics 2017-04, Vol.292 (4), p.1, Article 56
Hauptverfasser: Kooi, Jason E., Fischer, Patrick D., Buffo, Jacob J., Spangler, Steven R.
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description Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are large-scale eruptions of plasma from the Sun, which play an important role in space weather. Faraday rotation is the rotation of the plane of polarization that results when a linearly polarized signal passes through a magnetized plasma such as a CME. Faraday rotation is proportional to the path integral through the plasma of the electron density and the line-of-sight component of the magnetic field. Faraday-rotation observations of a source near the Sun can provide information on the plasma structure of a CME shortly after launch. We report on simultaneous white-light and radio observations made of three CMEs in August 2012. We made sensitive Very Large Array (VLA) full-polarization observations using 1 – 2 GHz frequencies of a constellation of radio sources through the solar corona at heliocentric distances that ranged from 6 –  15 R ⊙ . Two sources (0842+1835 and 0900+1832) were occulted by a single CME, and one source (0843+1547) was occulted by two CMEs. In addition to our radioastronomical observations, which represent one of the first active hunts for CME Faraday rotation since Bird et al. ( Solar Phys. , 98 , 341, 1985 ) and the first active hunt using the VLA, we obtained white-light coronagraph images from the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) C3 instrument to determine the Thomson-scattering brightness [ B T ], providing a means to independently estimate the plasma density and determine its contribution to the observed Faraday rotation. A constant-density force-free flux rope embedded in the background corona was used to model the effects of the CMEs on B T and Faraday rotation. The plasma densities ( 6 – 22 × 10 3 cm − 3 ) and axial magnetic-field strengths (2 – 12 mG) inferred from our models are consistent with the modeling work of Liu et al. ( Astrophys. J. , 665 , 1439, 2007 ) and Jensen and Russell ( Geophys. Res. Lett. , 35 , L02103, 2008 ), as well as previous CME Faraday-rotation observations by Bird et al. ( 1985 ).
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subjects Astrophysics and Astroparticles
Atmospheric Sciences
Birds
Corona
Magnetic fields
Physics
Physics and Astronomy
Plasma physics
Solar flares
Solar physics
Space Exploration and Astronautics
Space Sciences (including Extraterrestrial Physics
title VLA Measurements of Faraday Rotation through Coronal Mass Ejections
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