Physics
Scientific paper
Feb 2002
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2002soph..205..351k&link_type=abstract
Solar Physics, v. 205, Issue 2, p. 351-359 (2002).
Physics
7
Scientific paper
A spectral analysis of the time series of daily values of ten solar coronal radio emissions in the range 275-1755 MHz, the 2800 MHz radio flux, several UV emission lines in the chromosphere and in the transition region, and sunspot number, for six successive intervals of 132 days each, during June 1997-July 1999 (26 months) showed that the spectral characteristics were not the same for all intervals. Details are presented for Interval 1, where there was no 27-day oscillation, and Interval 2, where there was a strong 27-day oscillation. In every interval, periodicities were remarkably similar in most of these indices, indicating that the solar atmosphere (chromosphere and corona) rotated as one block, up to a height of ~150000 km. Above this height, the periodicities became obscure. Near the solar surface, sunspots showed extra or different periodicities, some of which vanished at low altitudes. For the 27-day feature as also for the long-term rise during 1996-1998, the maximum percentage changes were for radio emissions near 1350-1620 MHz.
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