Using radio triangulation to understand the origin of two subsequent type II radio bursts
Immanuel Christopher Jebaraj, Jasmina Magdalenic, Tatiana, Podladchikova, Camilla Scolini, Jens Pomoell, Astrid Veronig, Karin Dissauer,, Vratislav Krupar, Emilia Kilpua, and Stefaan Poedts

TL;DR
This study uses radio triangulation and MHD modeling to analyze the relationship between CMEs, flares, and shock waves, revealing complex interactions and non-radial shock propagation in solar eruptive events.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-wavelength approach combined with radio triangulation and MHD simulations to better understand CME-driven shocks and their radio signatures.
Findings
LF-type II burst occurs higher in the corona than the CME
Shock wave interacts with a streamer in the southeast quadrant
Non-radial propagation of shock waves affects their observational signatures
Abstract
Context: Eruptive events such as coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and flares accelerate particles and generate shock waves which can arrive at Earth and can disturb the magnetosphere. Understanding the association between CMEs and CME-driven shocks is therefore highly important for space weather studies. Aims: We present a study of the CME/flare event associated with two type II bursts observed on September 27, 2012. The aim of the study is to understand the relationship between the observed CME and the two distinct shock wave signatures. Methods: The multi-wavelength study of the eruptive event (CME/flare) was complemented with radio triangulation of the associated radio emission and modelling of the CME and the shock wave employing MHD simulations. Results: We found that, although temporal association between the type II bursts and the CME is good, the low-frequency type II(LF-type II)…
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