Abstract
An apparatus for recording the dynamic
spectrum of high-intensity solar radiation (in particular the sudden bursts) in
the frequency range 70-130 Mc/s. is described. The spectra are displayed on a
cathode-ray tube at intervals of about one-third of a second.
�� Solar
bursts observed with the apparatus were found to have widely different spectra.
However, analysis of a number of bursts indicated the common occurrence of
three distinct spectral types. These types are described and illustrated by
samples. One type, of narrow bandwidth, was exhibited by short-lived bursts
that occur in large numbers during periods of high intensity ( ?noise storms?)
; these bursts are presumed to be circularly polarized and associated with
sunspots. A second type, characterized by a slow drift of spectral features
towards the lower frequencies, was exhibited by sporadic " outbursts
" associated with solar flares. Other sporadic bursts had diverse spectra,
but some of them conformed to a third spectral type in which the frequency of
maximum intensity drifts rapidly towards the lower frequencies.
�� The
result that outbursts seem to exhibit a distinct type of spectrum is considered
to provide a possible means of recognizing these phenomena with certainty.
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