Multi-instrument view on solar eruptive events observed with the Siberian Radioheliograph: From detection of small jets up to development of a shock wave and CME
V. V. Grechnev, S. V. Lesovoi, A. A. Kochanov, A. M. Uralov, A. T., Altyntsev, A. V. Gubin, D. A. Zhdanov, E. F. Ivanov, G. Ya. Smolkov, L. K., Kashapova (Institute of Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Irkutsk, Russia)

TL;DR
This study utilizes the Siberian Radioheliograph to observe solar eruptive events, revealing new insights into flare dynamics, shock wave development, and CME formation through multi-instrument analysis.
Contribution
First detailed radio imaging of solar eruptions with SRH, demonstrating its capability to detect small eruptions and analyze shock waves and CMEs.
Findings
SRH detects eruptions directly and via microwave depressions.
Eruptive prominence expansion indicates flux-rope formation.
Shock waves from eruptions can be observed in multiple wavelengths.
Abstract
The first 48-antenna stage of the Siberian Radioheliograph (SRH) started single-frequency test observations early in 2016, and since August 2016 it routinely observes the Sun at several frequencies in the 4-8 GHz range with an angular resolution of 1-2 arc minutes and an imaging interval of about 12 seconds. With limited opportunities of the incomplete antenna configuration, a high sensitivity of about 100 Jy allows the SRH to contribute to the studies of eruptive phenomena along three lines. First, some eruptions are directly visible in SRH images. Second, some small eruptions are detectable even without a detailed imaging information from microwave depressions caused by screening the background emission by cool erupted plasma. Third, SRH observations reveal new aspects of some events to be studied with different instruments. We focus on an eruptive C2.2 flare on 16 March 2016 around…
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