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An analysis of slow drift type II radio burst and its association with full halo coronal mass ejection on 12th January 2022

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, , Citation SNA Shamsuddin et al 2023 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 2543 012013 DOI 10.1088/1742-6596/2543/1/012013

1742-6596/2543/1/012013

Abstract

Radio bursts have been a point of contention among astrophysicists in the modern era. Solar flares, coronal mass ejections (CMEs), and solar energetic particles (SEPs) that project from the Sun to interplanetary space can all be observed using this method. Based on data from e-Callisto, we detected a type II radio burst on 12th January 2022 starting at 04:24 UT and lasting until 04:56 UT. The full image of radio burst type II (SRBTII) was compiled from two stations (Almaty and Australia-ASSA), the drift rate of the bursts calculated are -0.07796 MHz/s and - 0.105822893 MHz/s respectively, and the relevant solar activity was determined. There was a possible association between the observed burst and the halo CME event on the day. This study includes the properties of the CME and the D-region Absorption Prediction (D-Rap) plot as the signal degradation indicator caused by the solar flare and CMEs to demonstrate its significance in understanding the impact on Earth's atmosphere.

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