Solar Radio Spikes and Type IIIb Striae Manifestations of Subsecond Electron Acceleration Triggered by a Coronal Mass Ejection
Kontar, Eduard P.; Vilmer, Nicole; Chen, Xingyao; Chrysaphi, Nicolina; Gordovskyy, Mykola; Clarkson, Daniel L.
United Kingdom, France
Abstract
Understanding electron acceleration associated with magnetic energy release at subsecond scales presents major challenges in solar physics. Solar radio spikes observed as subsecond, narrow-bandwidth bursts with Δf/f ~ 10-3-10-2 are indicative of a subsecond evolution of the electron distribution. We present a statistical analysis of frequency- and time-resolved imaging of individual spikes and Type IIIb striae associated with a coronal mass ejection (CME). LOFAR imaging reveals that the cotemporal (<2 s) spike and striae intensity contours almost completely overlap. On average, both burst types have a similar source size with a fast expansion at millisecond scales. The radio source centroid velocities are often superluminal and independent of frequency over 30-45 MHz. The CME perturbs the field geometry, leading to increased spike emission likely due to frequent magnetic reconnection. As the field restores itself toward the prior configuration, the observed sky-plane emission locations drift to increased heights over tens of minutes. Combined with previous observations above 1 GHz, the average decay time and source size estimates follow a ~1/f dependence over three decades in frequency, similar to radio-wave scattering predictions. Both time and spatial characteristics of the bursts between 30 and 70 MHz are consistent with radio-wave scattering with a strong anisotropy of the density fluctuation spectrum. Consequently, the site of the radio-wave emission does not correspond to the observed burst locations and implies acceleration and emission near the CME flank. The bandwidths suggest intrinsic emission source sizes <1″ at 30 MHz and magnetic field strengths a factor of two larger than average in events that produce decameter spikes.