CESRA Workshop 2019

July 8th - 12th, 2019

Telegrafenberg, Potsdam, Germany

Talk

Loss-cone instability modulation due to a magnetohydrodynamic sausage mode oscillation in the solar corona.

Eoin Carley, Trinity College Dublin

Solar flares often involve the acceleration of particles to relativistic energies and the generation of high-intensity bursts of radio emission. In some cases, the radio bursts can show periodic or quasiperiodic intensity pulsations. However, precisely how these pulsations are generated is still subject to debate. Prominent theories employ mechanisms such as periodic magnetic reconnection, magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) oscillations, or some combination of both. Here we report on high-cadence (0.25 seconds) radio imaging of a 228 MHz radio source pulsating with a period of 2.3 seconds during a solar flare on 2014-April-18. The pulsating source is due to an MHD sausage mode oscillation periodically triggering electron acceleration in the corona. The periodic electron acceleration results in the modulation of a loss-cone instability, ultimately resulting in pulsating plasma emission. The results show a complex combination of MHD oscillations and plasma instability modulation can lead to pulsating radio emission in astrophysical environments.