BARREL Balloon Observations and History
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Nugget | |
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Number: | 219 |
1st Author: | Greg Bowers |
2nd Author: | Alexa Halford |
Published: | February 17, 2014 |
Next Nugget: | TBD |
Previous Nugget: | Instantaneous Flare Properties |
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Contents |
Introduction
Solar hard X-rays and gamma-rays were discovered in the middle of the last century via balloon-borne instruments [Ref. 1] deployed by the Minnesota physicists L.E. Peterson and J.R. Winckler; the latter also discovered sprites. By modern naming convention, we'd call their flare SOL1958-03-20T13:05, but it preceded any useful soft X-ray observations and so there is no GOES classification of the event. Peterson & Winckler do report the simultaneous occurrence of a "magnetic crotchet," as also detected in the case of the Carrington flare in 1859. Such a geomagnetic effect clearly indicates the presence of strong solar soft X-ray emission along with the high-energy radiations discovered from the balloon.
In this Nugget we report recent balloon-borne observations from multiple balloons of the BARREL expedition to the Antarctic. Robyn MIllan of Dartmouth College is the lead scientist of this ambitious experiment. As with the original Peterson-Winckler experiment, BARREL wasn't designed to study solar active regions, but some of their signals come through loud and clear. BARREL's instrumentation allows it to study the precipitation of relativistic electrons from the Earth's Van Allen Belts.
How BARREL Works
A stream of small balloons circles the Antarctic continent, following the vortex winds at high altitudes in the polar regions. At any one time an array of 1 - 8 balloons float around the Antarctic. Power comes from solar cells, and data is retrieved over the iridium satellite network to an automated real-time webpage, allowing the ground-based scientists to follow along. Multi-point measurements allow us to better determine temporal and spatial structures in the radiation belts. A rather fine video describes the basic program better than we can here. We do show a pretty picture in Figure 1, though, taken at the launch of a BARREL balloon from the South African Antarctic station SANAE.
The instrumentation on each BARREL payload consists of a simple isotropically sensitive sodium iodide scintillation counter. This responds well to the gamma-rays and hard X-rays resulting from bremsstrahlung as the expected relativistic electrons undergo atomic collisions in the upper atmosphere. The time variations reveal the presence of interesting phenomena, and the detector records their spectra over a wide energy range. The solar gamma-rays and hard X-rays result from similar physics, but with the collisions taking place in the solar atmosphere instead of the Earth's.
BARREL Solar Observations
The BARREL detectors respond to many things. The full list would include many sources of cosmic X-rays, the Sun as we show in this nugget, the Van Allen Belts by design, and radiation from the Earth's atmosphere. For each of these components, the others would often be termed "background radiation". When studying one of these events, the others reduce the quality of the observation. However, these other events can sometimes help with the calibration of our data. for instance, the annihilation line in the atmosphere is used to help calibrate the energy of the events we look at and Gamma Ray Bursts have been found to be useful in making sure the timing of our events is correct between payloads. Some times these other sources are useful and sometimes not, but that is how science usually works!
Figure 2 shows the BARREL responses to the active region on the Sun which included an M-Class flare SOL2014-02-07T10:29 as well as radio bursts. Note that BARREL payload "2O" missed out, (the lower left panels). It was at a lower altitude which may have resulted in severe extinction of the incident solar radiation, especially since the Sun is low on the horizon even at high noon at such latitudes.
Both RHESSI and Fermi routinely produce comparable or better data for solar active regions such as these. However, as during the BARREL campaign there are always balloons up, and for the majority of January are completely sun-lit, the balloons do not go into eclipse. Thus this small balloon mission may be able to help add data to the study of these solar active regions.
Conclusions
BARREL reminds us of the origins of solar high-energy astrophysics (soft X-rays, hard X-rays, gamma rays, "solar cosmic rays"), where many interesting properties of solar active regions at high energies were first discovered a half-century ago, by Winckler and his group.
References
RHESSI Nugget Date | 17 February 2014 + |
RHESSI Nugget First Author | Greg Bowers + |
RHESSI Nugget Index | 219 + |
RHESSI Nugget Second Author | Alexa Halford + |