Solar type II radio bursts associated with CME expansions as shown by EUV waves
R. D. Cunha-Silva, F. C. R. Fernandes, C. L. Selhorst

TL;DR
This study analyzes two solar radio bursts associated with CME expansions, comparing shock heights derived from radio emissions and EUV wave observations, confirming their physical relationship and similar propagation heights.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of shock heights from Type-II radio bursts and EUV waves, using two events to validate the association between shocks and CMEs.
Findings
Shock speeds ranged from 211 to 719 km/s.
Radio source heights matched EUV wave heights assuming radial shock propagation.
The study confirms the physical connection between Type-II bursts and CME-driven shocks.
Abstract
We investigate the physical conditions of the sources of two metric Type-II bursts associated with CME expansions with the aim of verifying the relationship between the shocks and the CMEs, comparing the heights of the radio sources and the heights of the EUV waves associated with the CMEs. The heights of the EUV waves associated with the events were determined in relation to the wave fronts. The heights of the shocks were estimated by applying two different density models to the frequencies of the Type-II emissions and compared with the heights of the EUV waves. For the 13 June 2010 event, with band-splitting, the shock speed was estimated from the frequency drifts of the upper and lower branches of the harmonic lane, taking into account the H/F frequency ratio fH/fF = 2. Exponential fits on the intensity maxima of the branches revealed to be more consistent with the morphology of the…
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