Detection of Fundamental and Harmonic Type III Radio Emission and the Associated Langmuir Waves at the Source Region
Abstract
Type III radio emission generated in the vicinity of the Ulysses spacecraft has been detected at both the fundamental and harmonic of the local plasma frequency. The observations represent the first clear evidence of locally generated type III radio emission. This local emission shows no evidence of frequency drift, exhibits a relatively short rise time, is less intense than the observed remotely generated radio emission, and is temporally correlated with observed in situ Langmuir waves. The observations were made with the unified radio astronomy and wave (URAP) experiment on the Ulysses spacecraft between 1990 November 4 and 1991 April 30, as it traveled from 1 to 3 AU from the sun. During this time period many thousands of bursts were observed. However, only three examples of local emission and associated Langmuir waves were identified. This supports previous suggestions that type III radio emission is generated in localized regions of the interplanetary medium, rather than uniformly along the extent of the electron exciter beam.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- July 1992
- DOI:
- 10.1086/171586
- Bibcode:
- 1992ApJ...394..340R
- Keywords:
-
- Electrostatic Waves;
- Type 3 Bursts;
- Ulysses Mission;
- Astronomical Spectroscopy;
- Electron Beams;
- Plasma Frequencies;
- Radio Astronomy;
- Astrophysics;
- ARTIFICIAL SATELLITES;
- SPACE PROBES;
- INTERPLANETARY MEDIUM;
- RADIO CONTINUUM: SOLAR SYSTEM