CME-driven Shock and Type II Solar Radio Burst Band Splitting
Nicolina Chrysaphi, Eduard P. Kontar, Gordon D. Holman, Manuela Temmer

TL;DR
This study uses LOFAR observations to analyze band-splitting in CME-driven Type II solar radio bursts, providing evidence that the split sources are nearly co-spatial and supporting the upstream-downstream emission model.
Contribution
It offers the first quantitative analysis showing that band-splitting sources can originate from nearly co-spatial regions, considering radio-wave scattering effects.
Findings
Band-splitting sources are spatially separated by ~0.2 R_sun.
Radio-wave scattering can explain the apparent separation.
Supports the upstream-downstream emission model for band-splitting.
Abstract
Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) are believed to be effective in producing shocks in the solar corona and the interplanetary space. One of the important signatures of shocks and shock acceleration are Type II solar radio bursts that drift with the shock speed and produce bands of fundamental and higher harmonic plasma radio emission. An intriguing aspect of Type II radio bursts is the occasional split of a harmonic band into thinner lanes, known as band-splitting. Here, we report a detailed imaging and spectroscopic observation of a CME-driven shock producing band-splitting in a Type II burst. Using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR), we examine the spatial and temporal relation of the Type II burst to the associated CME event, use source imaging to calculate the apparent coronal density, and demonstrate how source imaging can be used to estimate projection effects. We consider two widely…
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