LOFAR tied-array imaging and spectroscopy of solar S bursts
D. E. Morosan, P. T. Gallagher, P. Zucca, A. O'Flannagain, R. Fallows,, H. Reid, J. Magdalenic, G. Mann, M. M. Bisi, A. Kerdraon, A. A. Konovalenko,, A. L. MacKinnon, H. O. Rucker, B. Thide, C. Vocks, A. Alexov, J. Anderson, A., Asgekar, I. M. Avruch, M. J. Bentum, G. Bernardi

TL;DR
This study used LOFAR to image and analyze over 3000 solar S bursts, revealing their spectral, spatial, and polarization properties, and suggesting their association with trans-equatorial magnetic loops and possible emission mechanisms.
Contribution
First high-cadence tied-array imaging of solar S bursts, providing detailed spectral, spatial, and polarization data, and linking their origin to trans-equatorial magnetic structures.
Findings
Over 3000 S bursts observed in 8 hours
S bursts are short-lived, narrow-bandwidth, and highly polarized
Associated with trans-equatorial magnetic loops
Abstract
Context. The Sun is an active source of radio emission that is often associated with energetic phenomena ranging from nanoflares to coronal mass ejections (CMEs). At low radio frequencies (<100 MHz), numerous millisecond duration radio bursts have been reported, such as radio spikes or solar S bursts (where S stands for short). To date, these have neither been studied extensively nor imaged because of the instrumental limitations of previous radio telescopes. Aims. Here, Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) observations were used to study the spectral and spatial characteristics of a multitude of S bursts, as well as their origin and possible emission mechanisms. Methods. We used 170 simultaneous tied-array beams for spectroscopy and imaging of S bursts. Since S bursts have short timescales and fine frequency structures, high cadence (~50 ms) tied-array images were used instead of standard…
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