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SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

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Page 1: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

SRS Data ExamplesA brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the

Solar Radio Spectrograph

Page 2: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

Overview

The following slides show examples of actual SRS displays observed at the Learmonth Solar Observatory, and are labelled to indicate various phenomena of interest.

Page 3: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

Typical non-solar signals that might be seen

Page 4: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

This type of signal is local interference

Page 5: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

Electrical storms may occur in summer and afternoon hours

Page 6: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

Meteors are seen as echoes from distant transmitters, often in the FM band. They may appear as dots, or short vertical lines, if several transmitters are involved.

Page 7: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

Each day, a minute after startup, the SRS system automatically performs a self calibration, which is seen as a sequence of vertical bars.

Page 8: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

This view shows a series of type III (fast drift) solar radio bursts.These are the most common type of radio signal produced by the Sun.

Page 9: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

This is a view of two type II (slow drift) solar radio bursts. Type II bursts are much less common than type III bursts, and it is veryrare to see two sequential intense type II’s like this.

Page 10: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

The next two slides illustrate the difference in background noise level that can occur between times of low and high density ionospheres. (eg solar minimum and solar maximum conditions).

Page 11: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

This shows a very clean display, with almost no ionospherically propagated signals apparent in the lower frequencies.

Page 12: SRS Data Examples A brief overview of some types of radio emissions observed on the Solar Radio Spectrograph

This display, around solar maximum (cycle 23), shows a large

mass of ionospherically propagated (HF) signals in the lowerfrequencies. The mass of colour around 27 MHz is from Indonesian CB traffic. We also see solar type III activity.