LOFAR observations of a jet-driven piston shock in the low solar corona
Ciara A. Maguire, Eoin P. Carley, Pietro Zucca, Nicole Vilmer, and, Peter T. Gallagher

TL;DR
This study uses LOFAR radio imaging to analyze a jet-driven piston shock in the solar corona, revealing the shock's origin, speed, and relation to a type II radio burst during a solar eruption.
Contribution
It provides detailed imaging and analysis of a jet-driven shock in the low solar corona, clarifying the shock's origin and properties using LOFAR observations.
Findings
Type II radio sources are located ~0.5 R_sun above the jet.
The shock propagated at ~1000 km/s, faster than the jet.
The shock was driven by a jet in the low corona.
Abstract
The Sun produces highly dynamic and eruptive events that can drive shocks through the corona. These shocks can accelerate electrons, which result in plasma emission in the form of a type II radio burst. Despite the large number of type II radio bursts observations, the precise origin of coronal shocks is still subject to investigation. Here we present a well observed solar eruptive event that occurred on 16 October 2015, focusing on a jet observed in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA), a streamer observed in white-light by the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (SOHO/LASCO), and a metric type II radio burst observed by the LOw Frequency Array (LOFAR). LOFAR interferometrically imaged the fundamental and harmonic sources of a type II radio burst and revealed that the sources did not appear to be co-spatial, as would be expected from the…
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