The Yohkoh Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT) emerged from a very perceptive and
constructive collaborative agreement between Japan's Institute of Space
and Astronautical Science (ISAS) and the USA National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) to cooperate on an ISAS mission to study high
energy processes in the sun's atmosphere. The SXT itself was conceived and
built by the National Observatory of Japan and the Lockheed Martin Solar
and Astrophysics Laboratory. The scientific planning for SXT, and its operation,
has involved scientific groups in Japan and the USA. A very strong
SXT team priority lay with the early implementation of a comprehensive
software system for data handling and analysis. This subsequently evolved
into the familiar and powerful
SolarSoft
system now in use by many solar
groups for a large variety of experiments.
The Yohkoh launch (August, 1991) gave us the first solar soft X-ray telescope
equipped with a CCD camera: SXT. Although SXT's angular resolution is
comparable to the Skylab telescopes, its performance is quite uniform
over the entire sun, it has much lower scattered light, much more telemetry,
and most importantly, the CCD itself. Such a detector is inherently linear
and stable, and (much to our pleasure) robust; it is still going strong ten
years later. Almost each day its images bring new thrills, especially since
Yohkoh has survived into its second solar maximum. With time we've learned
much better how to observe flares and CMEs with a soft X-ray telescope.
The SXT has recorded some well-known things much, much better than previous
experiments, e.g., the canonical magnetic reconnection model now has a much
firmer observational foundation (see
[1],
[2],
[3]
for relevant science
nuggets) thanks to SXT images. Trans-equatorial loops
([1],
[2],
[3]) turn
out to be hot and to be related to a class of CMEs. SXT discovered X-ray
jets ([1],
[2],
[3]),
and dimmings
([1],
[2],
[3]) and sigmoids
([1],
[2],
[3])
associated with coronal mass ejections. Along with the Yohkoh
Hard X-ray Telescope, the SXT images have also met Yohkoh's primary
objective and have greatly clarified the relationship between hard and
soft X-ray sources in solar flares
([1],
[2],
[3]).
Yohkoh now embarks on its second decade, and from the point of view of orbital
dynamics it appears that it could study an entire Hale cycle (22 years),
producing an incalculably valuable data base on coronal activity in an era
of concern about "space weather." Yohkoh data are freely available to the
scientific community at data centers in Japan, the USA and the U.K. We
are pleased to share on this CD-ROM some of the scientific "nuggets" from
the first decade of Yohkoh observing.