The Direct Amplification of Electromagnetic Waves by Electron Beams: An Alternate Explanation for Solar Type III Bursts

1998 ◽  
Vol 498 (2) ◽  
pp. 877-885 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangli Huang
1998 ◽  
Vol 103 (A8) ◽  
pp. 17223-17233 ◽  
Author(s):  
George A. Dulk ◽  
Yolande Leblanc ◽  
Peter A. Robinson ◽  
Jean-Louis Bougeret ◽  
Robert P. Lin

1980 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 235-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Pick ◽  
A. Raoult ◽  
N. Vilmer

Results on the space-time evolution of type III burst sources are summarized (Raoult and Pick, 1979) and observations on the temporal characteristics of the circular polarization are presented. It is shown that type III burst sources can be resolved into narrow components. Complex or very large sources may be explained by the occurrence of electron beams which propagate along different diverging paths. Propagating effects in a scattering corona are not required to explain the observations. The origin of the fundamental-harmonic pairs is briefly discussed.


1990 ◽  
Vol 142 ◽  
pp. 467-481
Author(s):  
R. P. Lin

The ISEE-3 spacecraft has provided in situ observations of electron beams, plasma waves, and associated solar type III radio emission in the interplanetary medium near 1 AU. These observations show that electron beams are formed by the faster electrons arriving before the slower ones, following an impulsive injection at the Sun. The resulting bump-on-tail in the reduced one-dimensional distribution function, f(v||), is unstable to the growth of electrostatic electron plasma (Langmuir) waves. The Langmuir waves are observed to be highly impulsive in nature. The onset and temporal variations of the observed plasma waves are in good qualitative agreement with the wave growth expected from the evolution of measured f(v||). However, far higher Langmuir wave intensities are predicted than are detected. In addition, the lack of obvious plateauing of the bump-on-tail suggests that the waves have been removed from resonance with the beam electrons by some wave-wave interaction. Bursts of low frequency, 30–300 Hz (in the spacecraft frame) waves are often found coincident in time with the most intense spikes of the Langmuir waves. These low-frequency waves appear to be long-wavelength ion acoustic waves, with wave number approximately equal to the beam-resonant Langmuir wave number. The observations suggest several possible interpretations: modulational instability, electrostatic decay instability, and electromagnetic decay instability; but none of these are fully consistent with the observations. Microstructures, too short in duration to be resolved by present experiments, have been invoked as an explanation of the phenomenon. Experiments are currently being developed to study these processes using fast wave-particle correlation techniques.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaetan Gauthier ◽  
Catherine Krafft ◽  
Philippe Savoini

<p>Solar radio bursts of Type III are believed to result from a sequence of physical processes ultimately leading to electromagnetic wave emissions near the electron plasma frequency ω<sub>p</sub> and its harmonic 2ω<sub>p</sub>. The radiation bursts are due to energetic electron beams accelerated during solar flares. When propagating in the solar corona and the interplanetary wind, these fluxes excite Langmuir and upper-hybrid wave turbulence, which can be further transformed into electromagnetic radiation near the frequencies ω<sub>p</sub> and 2ω<sub>p</sub>.</p><p>It is believed that, in a homogeneous plasma, Langmuir turbulence evolves due to three-wave interaction processes, such as the fusion of Langmuir waves L with sound waves S leading to the formation of electromagnetic waves T<sub>ωp</sub> at ω<sub>p</sub> or the decay of L-waves into S-waves and T<sub>ω</sub><sub>p</sub>-waves. On the other hand, the electromagnetic waves radiated at 2ω<sub>p</sub> should arise from the coalescence L + L’ --> T<sub>2ω</sub><sub>p</sub> of Langmuir waves L generated by the beam with Langmuir waves L’ coming from the electrostatic decay L --> L’ +  S.</p><p>Large-scale 2D3V Particle-In-Cell simulations have been performed with the fully kinetic code Smilei [Derouillat et al., 2018], using parameters typical of Type III solar radio busts. The excitation of upper-hybrid wave turbulence by energetic electron beams propagating in magnetized plasmas leads ultimately to electromagnetic emissions near the fundamental and the harmonic plasma frequencies.</p><p><em>Derouillat et al. , Comput. Phys. Commun., 222, 351, <strong>2017</strong>.</em></p>


1998 ◽  
Vol 503 (1) ◽  
pp. 435-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Ergun ◽  
D. Larson ◽  
R. P. Lin ◽  
J. P. McFadden ◽  
C. W. Carlson ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Type Iii ◽  

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