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result(s) for
"Fallows, R. A."
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From the Sun to the Earth: The 13 May 2005 Coronal Mass Ejection
by
Manoharan, P. K.
,
Chashei, I. V.
,
Giunta, A. S.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Corona
2010
We report the results of a multi-instrument, multi-technique, coordinated study of the solar eruptive event of 13 May 2005. We discuss the resultant Earth-directed (halo) coronal mass ejection (CME), and the effects on the terrestrial space environment and upper Earth atmosphere. The interplanetary CME (ICME) impacted the Earth’s magnetosphere and caused the most-intense geomagnetic storm of 2005 with a Disturbed Storm Time (
Dst
) index reaching −263 nT at its peak. The terrestrial environment responded to the storm on a global scale. We have combined observations and measurements from coronal and interplanetary remote-sensing instruments, interplanetary and near-Earth
in-situ
measurements, remote-sensing observations and
in-situ
measurements of the terrestrial magnetosphere and ionosphere, along with coronal and heliospheric modelling. These analyses are used to trace the origin, development, propagation, terrestrial impact, and subsequent consequences of this event to obtain the most comprehensive view of a geo-effective solar eruption to date. This particular event is also part of a NASA-sponsored Living With a Star (LWS) study and an on-going US NSF-sponsored Solar, Heliospheric, and INterplanetary Environment (SHINE) community investigation.
Journal Article
The Dynamic Spectrum of Interplanetary Scintillation: First Solar Wind Observations on LOFAR
by
Breen, A. R.
,
ter-Veen, S.
,
Fallows, R. A.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Observations and Modelling of the Inner Heliosphere
2013
The
LOw Frequency ARray
(LOFAR) is a next-generation radio telescope which uses thousands of stationary dipoles to observe celestial phenomena. These dipoles are grouped in various ‘stations’ which are centred on the Netherlands with additional ‘stations’ across Europe. The telescope is designed to operate at frequencies from 10 to 240 MHz with very large fractional bandwidths (25 – 100 %). Several ‘beam-formed’ observing modes are now operational and the system is designed to output data with high time and frequency resolution, which are highly configurable. This makes LOFAR eminently suited for dynamic spectrum measurements with applications in solar and planetary physics. In this paper we describe progress in developing automated data analysis routines to compute dynamic spectra from LOFAR time–frequency data, including correction for the antenna response across the radio frequency pass-band and mitigation of terrestrial radio-frequency interference (RFI). We apply these data routines to observations of interplanetary scintillation (IPS), commonly used to infer solar wind velocity and density information, and present initial science results.
Journal Article
Interplanetary Scintillation Observations of Stream Interaction Regions in the Solar Wind
by
Breen, A. R.
,
Bisi, M. M.
,
Fallows, R. A.
in
Astronomy
,
Astrophysics
,
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
2010
We present a summary of results from ten years of interplanetary scintillation (IPS) observations of stream interaction regions (SIRs) in the solar wind. Previous studies had shown that SIRs were characterized by intermediate-velocity solar wind and – in the case of compressive interactions – higher levels of scintillation. In this study we considered all cases of intermediate velocities in IPS observations from the
European Incoherent SCATter
(EISCAT) radar facility made at low- and mid-heliographic latitudes between 1994 and 2003. After dismissing intermediate-velocity observations which were associated with solar-wind transients (such as coronal mass ejections) we found that the remaining cases of intermediate velocities lay above coronal structures where stream interaction would be expected. An improved ballistic mapping method (compared to that used in earlier EISCAT studies of interaction regions) was used to identify the regions of raypath in IPS observations which might be expected to include interaction regions and to project these regions out to the distances of
in-situ
observations. The early stages of developing compression regions, consistent with their development on the leading edges of compressive stream interaction regions, were clearly detected as close to the Sun as 30
R
⊙
, and further ballistic projection out to the distances of
in-situ
observations clearly associated these developing structures with density and velocity features characteristic of developed interaction regions in
in-situ
data in the cases when such data were available. The same approach was applied to study non-compressive interaction regions (shear layers) between solar-wind streams of different velocities where the stream interface lay at near-constant latitude and the results compared with those from compressive interaction regions. The results confirm that intermediate velocities seen in IPS observations above stream boundaries may arise from either detection of intermediate-velocity flow in compression regions, or from non-compressive shear layers. The variation in velocity about the mean determined from IPS measurements (representing the spread in velocity across that part of the raypath associated with the interaction region in the analysis) was comparable in compressive and non-compressive regions – a potentially interesting result which may contain important information on the geometry of developing SIRs. It is clear from these results that compressive and non-compressive interaction regions belong to the same class of stream – stream interaction, with the dominant mode determined by the latitudinal gradient of the stream interface. Finally, we discuss the results from this survey in the light of new data from the
Heliospheric Imagers
(HI) on the
Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory
(STEREO) spacecraft and other instruments, and suggest possible directions for further work.
Journal Article
Effects of Thomson-Scattering Geometry on White-Light Imaging of an Interplanetary Shock: Synthetic Observations from Forward Magnetohydrodynamic Modelling
by
Xiong, Ming
,
Bisi, M. M.
,
Fallows, R. A.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Chemical synthesis
2013
Stereoscopic white-light imaging of a large portion of the inner heliosphere has been used to track interplanetary coronal mass ejections. At large elongations from the Sun, the white-light brightness depends on both the local electron density and the efficiency of the Thomson-scattering process. To quantify the effects of the Thomson-scattering geometry, we study an interplanetary shock using forward magnetohydrodynamic simulation and synthetic white-light imaging. Identifiable as an inclined streak of enhanced brightness in a time–elongation map, the travelling shock can be readily imaged by an observer located within a wide range of longitudes in the ecliptic. Different parts of the shock front contribute to the imaged brightness pattern viewed by observers at different longitudes. Moreover, even for an observer located at a fixed longitude, a different part of the shock front will contribute to the imaged brightness at any given time. The observed brightness within each imaging pixel results from a weighted integral along its corresponding ray-path. It is possible to infer the longitudinal location of the shock from the brightness pattern in an optical sky map, based on the east–west asymmetry in its brightness and degree of polarisation. Therefore, measurement of the interplanetary polarised brightness could significantly reduce the ambiguity in performing three-dimensional reconstruction of local electron density from white-light imaging.
Journal Article
Equatorwards Expansion of Unperturbed, High-Latitude Fast Solar Wind
by
Breen, A. R.
,
Fallows, R. A.
,
Bisi, M. M.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Flow characteristics
2013
We use dual-site radio observations of interplanetary scintillation (IPS) with extremely long baselines (ELB) to examine meridional flow characteristics of the ambient fast solar wind at plane-of-sky heliocentric distances of 24 – 85 solar radii (
R
⊙
). Our results demonstrate an equatorwards deviation of 3 – 4
∘
in the bulk fast solar wind flow direction over both northern and southern solar hemispheres during different times in the declining phase of Solar Cycle 23.
Journal Article
Observations of Rapid Velocity Variations in the Slow Solar Wind
by
Bisi, M. M.
,
Fallows, R. A.
,
Davies, J. A.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Light intensity
2013
The technique of interplanetary scintillation (IPS) is the observation of rapid fluctuations of the radio signal from an astronomical compact source as the signal passes through the ever-changing density of the solar wind. Cross-correlation of simultaneous observations of IPS from a single radio source, received at multiple sites of the
European Incoherent SCATter
(EISCAT) radio antenna network, is used to determine the velocity of the solar wind material passing over the lines of sight of the antennas. Calculated velocities reveal the slow solar wind to contain rapid velocity variations when viewed on a time-scale of several minutes.
Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory
(STEREO)
Heliospheric Imager
(HI) observations of white-light intensity have been compared with EISCAT observations of IPS to identify common density structures that may relate to the rapid velocity variations in the slow solar wind.
We have surveyed a one-year period, starting in April 2007, of the EISCAT IPS observing campaigns beginning shortly after the commencement of full science operations of the STEREO mission in a bid to identify common density structures in both EISCAT and STEREO HI datasets. We provide a detailed investigation and presentation of joint IPS/HI observations from two specific intervals on 23 April 2007 and 19 May 2007 for which the IPS P-Point (point of closest approach of the line of sight to the Sun) was between 72 and 87 solar radii out from the Sun’s centre. During the 23 April interval, a meso-scale (of the order of 10
5
km or larger) transient structure was observed by HI-1A to pass over the IPS ray path near the P-Point; the observations of IPS showed a micro-scale structure (of the order of 10
2
km) within the meso-scale transient. Observations of IPS from the second interval, on 19 May, revealed similar micro-scale velocity changes, however, no transient structures were detected by the HIs during that period. We also pose some fundamental thoughts on the slow solar wind structure itself.
Journal Article
Transient Structures and Stream Interaction Regions in the Solar Wind: Results from EISCAT Interplanetary Scintillation, STEREO HI and Venus Express ASPERA-4 Measurements
by
Fallows, R. A.
,
Whittaker, I. C.
,
Grande, M.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Comets
2010
We discuss the detection and evolution of a complex series of transient and quasi-static solar-wind structures in the days following the well-known comet 2P/Encke tail disconnection event in April 2007. The evolution of transient solar-wind structures ranging in size from <10
5
km to >10
6
km was characterised using one-minute time resolution observation of Interplanetary Scintillation (IPS) made using the European Incoherent SCATter (EISCAT) radar system. Simultaneously, the global structure and evolution of these features was characterised by the Heliospheric Imagers (HI) on the
Solar TERrestrial RElations Observatory
(STEREO) spacecraft, placing the IPS observations in context. Of particular interest was the observation of one transient in the slow wind, apparently being swept up and entrained by a Stream Interaction Region (SIR). The SIR itself was later detected
in-situ
at Venus by the Analyser of Space Plasma and Energetic Atoms (ASPERA-4) instrument on the
Venus Express
(VEX) spacecraft. The availability of such diverse data sources over a range of different time resolutions enables us to develop a global picture of these complex events that would not have been possible if these instruments were used in isolation. We suggest that the range of solar-wind transients discussed here may be the interplanetary counterparts of transient structures previously reported from coronagraph observations and are likely to correspond to transient magnetic structures reported in
in-situ
measurements in interplanetary space. The results reported here also provide the first indication of heliocentric distances at which transients become entrained.
Journal Article
The Comparison of Total Electron Content Between Radio and Thompson Scattering
by
Lamy, P.
,
Bisi, M. M.
,
Fallows, R. A.
in
Astrophysics
,
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
2016
The total electron content (TEC) of the solar corona in June 2002 is calculated by three observational techniques and the results are compared. The first technique is solar rotational tomography (SRT) applied to a 14-day time series of LASCO-C2 polarized brightness images, and the other two techniques use the
Cassini
spacecraft radio beacon for Doppler tracking (phase delay) and ranging (group delay). While the Doppler-tracking technique has an arbitrary zero-point, it is otherwise found that the three methods produce consistent estimates of the TEC to within established uncertainties, providing an independent check on the calibrations. The verification of the accuracy of the Doppler-tracking technique enables a significant improvement to the use of spacecraft data sets in studying the heliosphere: the density component to Faraday rotation can be separated from the magnetic-field component as variable structures cross, such as coronal mass ejections and magnetohydrodynamic waves. Furthermore, we show that the unique frequency-time variable characteristics of the hydrodynamic components of waves can be studied. Based on this work, future Faraday rotation studies of variable solar phenomena will isolate the electron density changes from the magnetic-field contribution. This capability will enable advanced research into variable heliospheric magnetic fields.
Journal Article
Three-Dimensional (3-D) Reconstructions of EISCAT IPS Velocity Data in the Declining Phase of Solar Cycle 23
by
Bisi, M. M.
,
Fallows, R. A.
,
Dorrian, G. D.
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Atmospheric Sciences
,
Corona
2010
The European Incoherent SCATter (EISCAT) radar has been used for remote-sensing observations of interplanetary scintillation (IPS) for a quarter of a century. During the April/May 2007 observing campaign, a large number of observations of IPS using EISCAT took place to give a reasonable spatial and temporal coverage of solar wind velocity structure throughout this time during the declining phase of Solar Cycle 23. Many co-rotating and transient features were observed during this period. Using the University of California, San Diego three-dimensional (3-D) time-dependent computer assisted tomography (C.A.T.) solar-wind reconstruction analysis, we show the velocity structure of the inner heliosphere in three dimensions throughout the time interval of 20 April through 20 May 2007. We also compare to white-light remote-sensing observations of an interplanetary coronal mass ejection (ICME) seen by the STEREO
Ahead
spacecraft inner Heliospheric Imager on 16 May 2007, as well as to
in-situ
solar-wind measurements taken with near-Earth spacebourne instrumentation throughout this interval. The reconstructions show clear co-rotating regions during this period, and the time-series extraction at spacecraft locations compares well with measurements made by the STEREO,
Wind
, and ACE spacecraft. This is the first time such clear structures have been revealed using this 3-D technique with EISCAT IPS data as input.
Journal Article
A large light-mass component of cosmic rays at 10(17)-10(17.5) electronvolts from radio observations
2016
Cosmic rays are the highest-energy particles found in nature. Measurements of the mass composition of cosmic rays with energies of 10(17)-10(18) electronvolts are essential to understanding whether they have galactic or extragalactic sources. It has also been proposed that the astrophysical neutrino signal comes from accelerators capable of producing cosmic rays of these energies. Cosmic rays initiate air showers--cascades of secondary particles in the atmosphere-and their masses can be inferred from measurements of the atmospheric depth of the shower maximum (Xmax; the depth of the air shower when it contains the most particles) or of the composition of shower particles reaching the ground. Current measurements have either high uncertainty, or a low duty cycle and a high energy threshold. Radio detection of cosmic rays is a rapidly developing technique for determining Xmax (refs 10, 11) with a duty cycle of, in principle, nearly 100 per cent. The radiation is generated by the separation of relativistic electrons and positrons in the geomagnetic field and a negative charge excess in the shower front. Here we report radio measurements of Xmax with a mean uncertainty of 16 grams per square centimetre for air showers initiated by cosmic rays with energies of 10(17)-10(17.5) electronvolts. This high resolution in Xmax enables us to determine the mass spectrum of the cosmic rays: we find a mixed composition, with a light-mass fraction (protons and helium nuclei) of about 80 per cent. Unless, contrary to current expectations, the extragalactic component of cosmic rays contributes substantially to the total flux below 10(17.5) electronvolts, our measurements indicate the existence of an additional galactic component, to account for the light composition that we measured in the 10(17)-10(17.5) electronvolt range.
Journal Article