Introduction

During sporadic periods of activity, the Sun produces the largest magnetic energy release events in the solar system: solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Flares emit radiation across the electromagnetic spectrum from gamma- and X-rays1 to radio waves2. Solar radio bursts originate from the acceleration of electrons in the relatively tenuous (electron number density \(n \, \lesssim \, {10^8}\) cm−3) solar corona, a region that, because of its low plasma density, produces very low, and hence undetectable, levels of X-ray and Extreme Ultra-Violet (EUV) emission. The radio bursts produced in such regions are, however, easily observable and thus provide unique diagnostics of electron acceleration and propagation in the outer corona and surrounding heliosphere. They provide information on the impulsive initial evolution of solar eruptions, information that is essential to the overall understanding of such events and hence to developing an effective system of space weather prediction and mitigation.

Most of the brightest solar radio bursts are due to coherent radio plasma emission processes:3 the injection of non-thermal electrons into the solar corona leads to the generation of Langmuir plasma waves through the electron-electron two-stream instability3, and these plasma waves are converted into radio emission at both the plasma (fundamental) \({f_{{\rm{p}}e}} \, \simeq \, 9 \times {10^{ - 3}}\sqrt {n\left( {{\rm {cm}}{^{ - 3}}} \right)} \) MHz and second-harmonic (f H = 2f pe) frequencies. Radio bursts produced by electrons moving away from the Sun along open magnetic field lines are known as Type III bursts. The fine frequency structures, so-called Type IIIb bursts, are commonly believed to be caused by density inhomogeneities in the background plasma4,5. The radiation propagates through the solar corona where it is both refracted6 and scattered by turbulent plasma processes7,8, hence understanding these propagation effects is critical to a correct interpretation of solar radio burst images9,10,11. Because coherent plasma emission produces radio waves at frequencies close to the local plasma frequency11,12,13, propagation effects are particularly significant and must therefore be carefully considered in determining both the intrinsic properties of the surrounding plasma (e.g., density, magnetic field, density gradient, and turbulence) and of the emitting high-energy electron beams (e.g., location, energy).

High-time resolution one-dimensional scans14 or single-frequency images15 have demonstrated that Type III radio sources expand with time. This could (for such single-frequency observations) be due to either propagation effects or intrinsic variations in the structure of the Type III burst15,16,17. Further, imaging observations with the Culgoora radioheliograph18,19 have also revealed an interesting enigma for the events at the limb: sources of fundamental emission are radially shifted outwards with respect to harmonic emission (and hence are apparently situated at different heights in the solar atmosphere), although the physics of the responsible coherent plasma emission mechanism requires that they are produced cospatially3. This is particularly puzzling, since the refraction of radio waves shifts sources radially inwards and, since the fundamental component is refracted more than the second-harmonic component, the fundamental component should appear lower19. Although a variety of possible resolutions of this paradox have been presented20,21, a possible resolution that is consistent with the observed increase in source size with time involves radio wave propagation effects9,11, which could10,22,23 shift the observed positions of fundamental radiation upward (radially outward). However, to date there have been no observations that permit the decoupling of propagation effects from intrinsic source variations, and hence there has been no quantitative assessment of the reasons behind this paradox.

Here we report imaging spectroscopy observations of fine frequency structures associated with a solar radio burst24. These observations with high spatial and temporal resolution demonstrate radio wave propagation effects in the solar corona.

Results

Overview of the observations

The radio burst on 2015 April 16 around 11:57 UT was simultaneously observed by one of the largest decameter arrays, the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR)25 and by the URAN-226 (Ukrainian Radio interferometer of National Academy of Sciences). The latter provides corroborating observations at other frequencies, polarization information, and valuable cross-calibration for the LOFAR observations between 30 and 32 MHz.

The dynamic spectrum (radio flux in the frequency-time plane; Fig. 1) shows two main burst components, each characterized by a rapid decrease in frequency with time; the first burst passes through 20 MHz at \( \simeq \)11:57:00 UT and is followed a few seconds later by another burst which passes through 20 MHz at \( \simeq \)11:57:04 UT. The first burst is radiation at the fundamental plasma frequency, while the second burst is harmonic emission from the same electron beam forming a so-called type IIIb-type III pair27,28 (for example, at 11:57:00 UT the emission in the first burst is concentrated at frequencies around 20 MHz while the emission in the second burst is concentrated around 40 MHz.)

Fig. 1
figure 1

Sun-integrated dynamic spectrum of the solar radio burst. a The Type III-IIIb solar radio burst observed on 2015 April 16 with both LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR)25 and Ukrainian Radio interferometer of National Academy of Sciences (URAN-2)26. b The expanded view of a 3-s interval shows finely-structured Type IIIb striae at frequencies between 32 and 36 MHz that have frequency widths of only 0.1–0.3 MHz

The Type III burst in this event is rather typical;19,28 for example, the peak flux density between 32 and 40 MHz is 100–200 solar flux units (sfu) (1 sfu = 10−22 J s−1 m−2 Hz−1), and it has circular polarizations of ~15% and <5% for the fundamental and harmonic components, respectively. The rapid downward drift of frequency with time is a defining characteristic of solar Type III bursts;19 it results from the rapidly decreasing ambient density (and hence decreasing plasma frequency away from the Sun) as the emitting electron beam propagates upward through the decreasing density of the solar atmosphere. Since the plasma frequency \(f \propto {n^{1/2}}\), it follows that \((1/f){\rm{d}}f/{\rm{d}}t = (1/2n){\rm{d}}n/{\rm{d}}t = (1/2)({\rm{dln}} \, (n)/{\rm{d}}r)({\rm{d}}r/{\rm{d}}t) = v/2L\), where \(L = ({\rm{dln}}(n)/{\rm{d}}r)^{ - 1}\) is the density scale height and v = dr/dt is the vertical component of the velocity of the exciting electron beam. Using the Newkirk29 density model of the solar corona as a typical model, the characteristic density scale height is \(L \simeq 0.3{R_ \odot } \simeq 2 \times {10^{10}}\) cm at a level in the atmosphere corresponding to plasma frequencies around 32 MHz. Therefore, the observed frequency drift rate \({\rm{d}}f/{\rm{d}}t \simeq 7\) MHz s−1 at the f = 32 MHz point in the fundamental frequency burst component corresponds to \(v = (2L/f)({\rm{d}}f/{\rm{d}}t) \simeq {10^{10}}{\rm{cm}}\,{{\rm{s}}^{ - {\rm{1}}}} \simeq c/3\), where c is the speed of light. The speed c/3 is a typical speed for the  ~ 30 keV electrons that excite Type III bursts19,30.

The expanded view in Fig. 1 shows that the fundamental component of the burst consists of multiple fine-structured striae; such fine structure is the characteristic signature of Type IIIb bursts24 (the number of striae increases with decreasing frequency, so that below ~30 MHz, the frequency structure of the burst looks quasi-continuous). These fine frequency structures are believed to be due to small-scale density fluctuations4,28,31,32 that modulate the resulting radio emission; they have full width at half-maximum (FWHM) durations around 1 s at a given frequency (Fig. 1). The presence of these fine striae in the fundamental component of the burst provides an estimate of the characteristic size of the emitting volume (intrinsic emission source size), which can then (see below) be compared to the source sizes obtained from direct imaging in order to evaluate the effects of radio wave propagation on the observed source size. Specifically, the individual striae (see the zoomed-in dynamic spectrum in Fig. 1) have FWHM frequency widths Δf ~ 0.3 MHz. Although the relationship between Δf and the size of the radio emitting source is model dependent5, and in particular depends on the angle between the direction of beam propagation and the direction of the density gradient, an order-of-magnitude estimation based on the plasma emission mechanism suggests that the limited frequency range corresponds to a vertical extent \(\Delta r \simeq 2L(\Delta f/f) \simeq 4 \times {10^8}\) cm. We note this would be the size of a density inhomogeneity leading to an enhanced level of Langmuir waves, while the electron beam generating the Langmuir waves is extended over a much larger distance4,31. Such a characteristic size of the fundamental emitting source extends over an angle \(\theta \simeq 0.1\) arcmin at the Sun and hence subtends a very small solid angle (\(\Omega \simeq {10^{ - 2}}\) arcmin2) on the sky. The harmonic emission is likely to form over a much larger region in physical space33, a feature that is also evident from the dynamic spectra—the fundamental component has clear striae, but the harmonic is rather smooth.

Imaging

LOFAR imaging observations were made using 24-core Low Band Antenna stations with tied-array beam forming25,34,35,36,37, an observing mode that provides images with sub-second time resolution and unprecedented frequency resolution in order to resolve the individual striae in the Type IIIb burst. The array of 127 tied-array beams cover the sky out to \(\sim 2{R_ \odot }\) with a mosaic beam spacing of  ~ 0.1 degrees. We note that tied-array mosaic imaging is different from the traditional method of producing images from interferometric visibilities. The LOFAR core size of \(D \simeq 3.5\) km provides an angular resolution \(\lambda /D \simeq 9\) arcmin at 32 MHz (wavelength λ = 9.4 m) and the dirty beam FWHM area A LOFAR was \( \simeq 110\) arcmin2 at the time of the observation. The flux was calibrated against the Crab nebula both before and after the burst observations; in addition, the Sun-integrated flux was compared with URAN-2 data, which showed agreement within a factor of  ~ 2. The temporal modulation of the URAN-2 flux also demonstrated excellent agreement with the observed fine frequency structures, excluding instrumental effects.

The imaging of the radio emission was performed with time resolution \( \simeq \)50 ms, during which radio waves propagate a distance of only  ~ 1.5 × 109 cm \( \simeq 0.3\) arcmin, allowing us to accurately track variations in both the location and the areal extent of the source on sub-second timescales. For each 12 kHz-wide frequency channel we fitted an elliptical Gaussian to the LOFAR images. The ellipse centroid position (which is determined to an accuracy significantly better than the angular resolution of a single beam measurement38) and the FWHM area of each source were estimated for all frequency channels during the radio burst (Fig. 2). Figure 3 shows the size and centroid positions (with uncertainties) of both fundamental (F) and harmonic (H) images for a typical stria near 32 MHz; the FWHM areas are A F ~ 400 arcmin2 for the fundamental and A H ~ 600 arcmin2 for the harmonic. The accuracy of determining the source position and area is variable, depending on the emission flux (Methods section), and near the burst peak they can be as high as  ± 0.1 arcmin for the position and  ± 5 arcmin2 for the area (see Fig. 4). The areas and area uncertainties are well above the LOFAR resolution limit and hence the radio sources are reliably resolved (Methods section). The radio source sizes corrected for the LOFAR beam, \({A^{\{ {\rm{F}},{\rm{H}}\} }} - {A_{{\rm{LOFAR}}}}\), are both four orders of magnitude larger than the emission region size \(\Omega \sim {10^{ - 2}}\) arcmin2 as determined above from considerations of the fine frequency width of individual burst striae.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Radio images of the fine structure components of the burst. Superimposed images of the Extreme Ultra-Violet (EUV) and radio emission at the selected 32.5 MHz frequency (Fig. 1). Green: Observations from the Solar Dynamics Observatory/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly43 171 Å at 2015 April 16 11:57 UT; Red: radio fundamental plasma frequency (F) component at 11:56:57.5 UT; Blue: second-harmonic (H) radio component at 11:57:01 UT. The centroid positions of the F- and H-components are marked with white and black crosses, respectively. The full width at half-maximum (FWHM) ellipses are made using two-dimensional Gaussian fits to the data. The white dots show the phased array beam locations and the oval shows the half-maximum synthesized LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) beam. See also Supplementary Movie 1

Fig. 3
figure 3

Centroid locations of the fundamental (F; red) and harmonic (H; blue) sources for 32.5 MHz as a function of time, determined using a two-dimensional Gaussian fit to each observed source. Darker colors correspond to later times, as shown in the color scale in the insert. Straight-line fits to the positions of each centroid are shown by the arrows. The time elapsed is measured as time after the flux peak; 11:56:57.6 UT for fundamental and 11:57:01 UT for harmonic (Fig. 4). The full solar disk shows clearly that the F source is displaced radially outwards. The error bars represent one standard deviation of uncertainty. The uncertainties of the source position were determined by the 2D Gaussian fit (see Methods)

Fig. 4
figure 4

Time variations of flux, radial distance from the solar disk center, and areal extent, for the selected stria in the 32.5 MHz frequency channel. a time histories of the F and H-components of the radio flux density in solar flux units (sfu) b Radial distances of the F and H sources versus time; c Areas of the F- and H-source areas versus time. Linear fits (red and blue lines, for the F and H sources, respectively) to the radial positions \(r = {r_0} + (dr/dt)(t - {t_0})\) and areas \(A = {A_0} + (dA/dt)(t - {t_0})\) were applied in the time ranges shown by the dark and light gray patches, respectively. The error bars represent one standard deviation of uncertainty. The uncertainties of the source size and position were determined by the 2D Gaussian fit (Methods section)

Figure 3 shows the temporal evolution of the centroid location, and the areal extent, of the fundamental and harmonic sources (both observed at a frequency of 32.5 MHz, so that the H-radiation is produced in a region with a density one-fourth that of the region emitting the fundamental—and a few seconds later, when the emission at the fundamental frequency has drifted downward to 16.25 MHz). The centroid of the fundamental frequency radiation moves in a direction roughly parallel to the local solar radius (i.e., north-west in the plane-of-image; see full-disk image in Fig. 3), whereas the centroid of the source of harmonic radiation moves in a roughly transverse direction. The motion of F and H sources due to frequency drift between 38 and 32 MHz caused by electron transport is shown in Fig. 5. Figure 4 shows the time evolution of the radial centroid positions and areas in the X–Y plane, for both F and H components (Fig. 3). The areal expansion of both F and H components is most pronounced during the decay of the burst. This is consistent with various wave scattering models6,10,11, although these models predict different motions and growth rates of the source, depending on the assumed emission and scattering anisotropies39. Therefore, we focus on times during the decay and estimate the radial velocity in the X-Y plane and areal expansion rate by fitting linear expressions \(r(x,y) = {r_0} + ({\rm{d}}r/{\rm{d}}t)(t - {t_0}),A = {A_0} + ({\rm{d}}A/{\rm{d}}t)(t - {t_0})\) during the time intervals shown by the shaded regions in Fig. 4. The centroid of the F-emission moves radially outward at an average speed \(dr/dt \simeq 1.8\,{\rm{arcmin}}\,{{\rm{s}}^{ - 1}} \simeq c/4\), while its area A F grows from  ~ 420 arcmin2 to  ~ 530 arcmin2 within  ~ 0.6 sec, an average areal expansion rate \({\rm{d}}{A^{\rm{F}}}/{\rm{d}}t \simeq 180\) arcmin2 s−1. On the other hand, the centroid of the harmonic component shows negligible radial motion, while its area A H grows from  ~ 600 arcmin2 to ~ 760 arcmin2 over  ~ 3 s. The average areal expansion rate is \(d{A^{\rm{H}}}/dt \simeq 50\) arcmin2 s−1, about one-fourth the areal expansion rate for the fundamental component.

Fig. 5
figure 5

Motion of the sources. Gray arrows show the projected motion of the burst component in frequency as the burst drifts in frequency given by the color bar. Centroid positions as a function of time for fundamental (red) and harmonic (blue) components with time after the peak at each frequency (Fig. 4). The error bars represent one standard deviation of uncertainty. The uncertainties of the position determined by the 2D Gaussian fit (Methods section) are given by the red and blue crosses

We repeated this analysis for 48 well-observed striae in frequency channels between 32 and 38 MHz (Fig. 6). We excluded frequencies below 32 MHz where the striae start to overlap and images above 38 MHz due to low signal-to-noise ratio. Figure 6 shows that for all well-resolved striae, the rate of areal expansion of the fundamental source is ~(2–4) times greater than the expansion rate for the harmonic source.

Fig. 6
figure 6

Statistical properties of the source areal expansion factors. a Flux along the spine of the Type IIIb burst as a function of frequency. Peaks colored in red indicate selected fine temporal stria. b Expansion rate dA/dt for all frequency channels with well-observed striae (those indicated by red in the top panel); the red and blue lines show the 1-MHz average values for fundamental and harmonic radiation, respectively. c ratio of the expansion rates \((d{A^{\rm{F}}}/dt)/(d{A^{\rm{H}}}/dt)\) as a function of frequency, averaged over the 1 MHz frequency bins. The error bars represent one standard deviation of uncertainty

Individual striae start at different times within the Type IIIb burst (Fig. 1). Each stria also initially appears at a different location on the solar disk within a broad envelope of the Type IIIb burst (Methods section). However, nearly all stria sources move radially while the harmonic component at the same frequency behaves in a completely different manner. This allows us to exclude refraction effects in the Earth’s ionosphere as an explanation for the observed motion of the fundamental stria component. Further, the very similar expansion rates inferred from observations in 235 different frequency channels, at 48 different striae spread over 2 s (larger than  ~ 1 s duration of a stria) allow us to infer with a high degree of confidence that observed regions of fundamental radiation expand faster than regions of harmonic radiation. As we argue next, this result is not supported by any reasonable variation in the intrinsic source sizes in existing models2, but is consistent with propagation-scattering effects.

An intrinsic variation of source size with time at a given frequency requires that the emitting source grows in time as larger and larger iso-density surfaces start to emit17. However, in order to produce the observed striae, which are very narrow in frequency and large in imaged sources, such a model would require two essential features. Firstly, the emitting region is distributed over a thin but large (and changing) volume, all at the same plasma frequency and thus density; any density inhomogeneities would have to be always parallel to iso-frequency surfaces, and secondly, the positions of the stria, which originate at different locations, have nearly identical centroid motions. Moreover, in such a scenario, the expansion rate is related to the structure of the iso-density surface and it is challenging to explain why the expansion has a similar rate at all frequencies, or equivalently why all the iso-density surfaces, which are spread over a height range \(\sim 0.2{R_ \odot }\), expand at nearly identical rates. Finally, such a model does not explain why the centroids of the fundamental and harmonic components behave differently. Therefore, we reach the rather inescapable conclusions that the emitting sources most probably have sizes comparable to the inhomogeneity scale; they are randomly located within the corona and are responsible for the individual striae; and that the observed extent of the radio burst is primarily determined not by the size of the emitting region but rather by wave propagation effects in the surrounding atmosphere.

Radio wave propagation

A simple model6,11 for multiple scattering off density inhomogeneities does indeed produce a (linear) increase in the area of a source (in solid angle units) with time (see Equation 64 from11): \(\frac{{{\rm{d}} < {\theta ^2} >}}{{{\rm{d}}t}} \propto \frac{{f_{{\rm{p}}e}^4}}{{{f^4}}}\frac{1}{{{\mu ^4}}}\frac{{{{\langle \delta n\rangle }^2}}}{{{n^2}\ell }}\), where \({\langle \delta n\rangle ^2}\) is the rms level of density fluctuations, l is the density inhomogeneity scale11,40, and μ is the refractive index. For a fully ionized plasma, \({\mu ^2}(f) = 1 - f_{{\rm{p}}e}^2/{f^2}\) is frequency dependent, so the rate of areal increase for radiation near the plasma frequency will always be larger than that for radiation at the harmonic frequency, qualitatively consistent with the observations in Fig. 6. As the waves propagate away from the source into regions of lower density (and so lower plasma frequency), the (local) plasma frequency f pe becomes progressively smaller than the wave frequency f, the refractive index approaches unity for both fundamental and harmonic radiation, and the expansion rate \( \propto f_{{\rm{p}}e}^4/{\mu ^4}\) is greatly reduced. The location of the radio source is  ~ 7 arcmin from the solar disk center, so the short temporal extent (average FWHM \(\Delta t \simeq 1.1\) s) of the striae constrains the radio wave broadening along the line of sight direction to be less than \(c\Delta t \simeq 3 \times {10^{10}}\) cm \( \simeq 8\) arcmin. Since the perpendicular to line of sight size (~20 arcmin on the plane of the sky) is larger than the line of sight 8 arcmin size, the combined effect of scattering and emission directivity3 is likely to be anisotropic, with the dominant effect being perpendicular to the line-of-sight direction. While both the fundamental and harmonic regions expand, the fundamental source is also radially moving, and this suggests a rather small intrinsic source size for the fundamental emission and a somewhat larger intrinsic source size for the harmonic emission. Indeed, the harmonic emission source is  ~ 1.4 times larger than the fundamental (Fig. 4).

Discussion

We have reported imaging spectroscopy observations of fine frequency structures in solar Type III radio bursts. The high frequency-time resolution of these observations have allowed us to image the radio waves as they emerge from the solar atmosphere.

The observed sources have linear extents, corrected for the finite size of the LOFAR beam, of \(\sim \sqrt {({A^{\rm{F}}} - {A_{{\rm{LOFAR}}}})} \simeq (17 - 22)\) arcmin near the peak of the fundamental component (Fig. 4). The source sizes are very similar to the average source sizes \( \simeq \)20 arcmin inferred for Type III bursts at 43 MHz19 and are much larger than the intrinsic emission source sizes ~0.1 arcmin deduced from the appearance of fine temporal substructures within the burst. The simulations of LOFAR response (Methods section) show the small source required by plasma emission cannot explain the LOFAR observations. We have also found that the areal extent of the fundamental component grows more rapidly than the harmonic component, consistent with a model involving scattering off density inhomogeneities. The measured expansion rates (Fig. 6), as well as the sub-second fundamental source motion, provide valuable information on the fibreous structure of the corona10 and on the (currently poorly known) characteristics of the density turbulence spectrum6,11.

Because the intrinsic source size is so much smaller than the apparent source sizes, the brightness temperature of the source must be similarly (\({A^{\rm{F}}}/\Omega \sim {10^4}\)) larger than that obtained using the apparent source areas. A flux of 100 solar flux units at the fundamental frequency corresponds to a brightness temperature ~1014 K, which is larger than what is typically assumed2 and interestingly close to the maximum brightness temperatures observed for type III solar radio bursts33.

These results also resolve a long-standing problem in solar radio astronomy—why the fundamental and harmonic sources, which result from the same physical process, do not generally appear to coincide spatially (Figs. 2 and 3). Because propagation effects result in a large increase in source size with time, the apparent source locations of the F and H sources are controlled primarily by these propagation-scattering effects, rather than by properties of the underlying emitting sources. We encourage further tests of this conclusion through analysis of radio data in different frequency bands.

The differential rates of propagation of F and H-radiation can easily lead, within a modest time, to a systematic displacement of the apparent source centroids, which Fig. 3 shows to be in the radial direction.

These observations also allow new testing and improvement of radio wave propagation models10,11,13 in turbulent coronal plasma, tests that have hitherto not been available for the solar corona40. In particular, since the areal expansion coefficient is proportional to the size of the density fluctuations, this provides a diagnostic of the latter quantity and opens up previously unavailable opportunities for further study of various manifestations of solar activity, such as flares, coronal mass ejections and formation of the solar wind.

Methods

Polarization

The Sun-integrated flux densities observed by LOFAR and URAN-2 described above have been compared in Fig. 7. Polarization measured by URAN-2 is given for the same frequency.

Fig. 7
figure 7

Total flux and polarization data. a Time profile of the Sun-integrated radio flux at 32 MHz from the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) and Ukrainian Radio interferometer of National Academy of Sciences (URAN-2). b Degree of circular polarization of the radio emission at the same frequency

Radio source position and size

The imaging has been performed for 48 individual stria in 235 frequency channels and is shown in Fig. 5. The LOFAR observations were made using 24-core Low Band Antenna stations using tied-array beam forming images with sub-second time resolution. The array of 127 tied-array beams, which are the coherent sum of all the station beams, covered the Sun with  ~ 6 arcmin spacing (the data are publicly available via http://lofar.target.rug.nl). Each LOFAR beam measures the flux F i for a given position on the sky given by \(x_i^b\), \(y_i^b\) in heliocentric coordinates. Figure 2 shows the locations of the beams on the solar disk. The measured flux F i recorded by LOFAR is a convolution of a LOFAR beam point spread function (Fig. 8) and the true source. The positions and the flux values for each beam allow us to reconstruct the images. Iteratively finding the highest value in the array of F i , 1% of the maximum convolved with a point spread function (Fig. 8) has been subtracted from all F i until the highest value is smaller than 5% of the initial maximum. The resulting cleaned image41,42 is shown in Fig. 9. Figure 9 also compares the result of simulated LOFAR images.

Fig. 8
figure 8

The synthesized tied-array beam from 24 LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) stations at 32 MHz. a 2D synthesized beam centered at the Sun center. b The slice of the beam at y = 0. Full Width at Half-Maximum (FWHM) area of the synthesized beam is around 110 arcmin2

Fig. 9
figure 9

Image cleaning and simulation of LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) response. a The dirty image resulting from linear interpolation between the beam locations shown as crosses; b CLEANed image for the same dataset as (a), (c) and (d) demonstrates the simulated LOFAR images from a source located \(x = 200''\), \(y = 400''\) and convolved with the LOFAR beam; c compact 1 arcmin Full Width at Half-Maximum (FWHM) circular source; d extended 20 arcmin FWHM circular source. The thin solid line in all images shows 50% intensity level. Bold circle shows the Sun and the beam positions are given by crosses. All images are normalized to 1 for easy comparison

In principle, one can apply the cleaning procedure to thousands of images, and then deduce the measured source parameters. However, because we are interested in the characteristic size and source position only, such an extensive calculation effort seems unjustified. Instead, we determine the areal extent and subtract the LOFAR dirty beam area. The side-lobes do not exceed 10%, so the images are weakly affected by cleaning at half-maximum level (the top right (cleaned) image looks similar to the top left (dirty) image at 50% level in Fig. 9). The simulations in Fig. 9 also demonstrate that small \( \simeq 1\) arcmin sources are inconsistent with the data.

To determine the size and the position of the source, we fit an elliptical Gaussian \(S(x,y) = {S_0}{\rm{exp}}( - {x'^2}/2\sigma _x^2 - {y'^2}/2\sigma _y^2)\), where \(x' = (x - {x_{\rm{s}}}){\rm{cos}}(T) - (y - {y_{\rm{s}}}){\rm{sin}}(T)\) and \(y' = (x - {x_{\rm{s}}}){\rm{sin}}(T) + (y - {y_{\rm{s}}})cos(T)\), where T is the rotation from the x axis, in the clockwise direction. Minimizing \({\chi ^2}\)

$${\chi ^2} = \mathop {\sum}\limits_{i = 1}^N \frac{{{{({F_i} - S(x_i^b,y_i^b;{S_0},{x_{\rm{s}}},{y_{\rm{s}}},{\sigma _x},{\sigma _y},T))}^2}}}{{\delta {F^2}}},$$

we find the Gaussian parameters for each moment of time and frequency. The inferred parameters are as follows: S 0 is the peak amplitude, x s , y s are the coordinates of the central source position, \({\sigma _x},{\sigma _y}\) are the rms lengths, T is the rotation of the ellipse from the x axis. The background flux level before the burst for each frequency and beam was taken as the uncertainties on the flux δF (typically around 1 sfu). The resulting fitted Gaussian gives the source size (convolved with the LOFAR beam). The half-maximum area of the fit gives the areal extent of the source. Since we are interested in the position and the areal extent of the source we provide the expressions for the errors. The errors δx s , δy s for the source position (x s , y s ) can be written38

$$\delta {x_{\rm{s}}} \approx \sqrt {\frac{2}{\pi }} \frac{{{\sigma _x}}}{{{\sigma _y}}}\frac{{\delta F}}{{{S_0}}}h,\,\,\,\delta {y_{\rm{s}}} \approx \sqrt {\frac{2}{\pi }} \frac{{{\sigma _y}}}{{{\sigma _x}}}\frac{{\delta F}}{{{S_0}}}h,$$

where h is the angular resolution. For weakly elliptical source \({\sigma _x}\sim {\sigma _y}\) as presented in Fig. 2, the uncertainty on the source position gives \(\delta {y_{\rm{s}}} \simeq \delta {x_{\rm{s}}}\sim 0.1\) arcmin for the fundamental ( ~ 120 sfu) and \(\delta {x_{\rm{s}}} \simeq \delta {y_{\rm{s}}}\sim 0.6\) arcmin for the harmonic since the harmonic ( ~ 17 sfu) has 5–6 times lower flux near the peak of each component (Fig. 4).

Similarly, the error on the source half-maximum area A can be estimated

$$\frac{{\delta A}}{A} \approx 2\frac{{\delta F}}{{{S_0}}}\frac{h}{{\sqrt A }}$$

For example, the error on the area becomes \(\delta A/A\sim\) 5% for harmonic near the peak shown in Fig. 4. The above expressions show that the accurate determination of the source positions and the areas becomes available due to high signal to noise ratios F i /δF. We further note that the results do not imply that the source has a Gaussian shape, but show that the multi-beaming measurements can provide estimates of the position better that the resolution of the instrument and the area measurements better than ’dirty’ beam half-maximum area.

Data availability

The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are available in the LOFAR Long Term Archive, http://lofar.target.rug.nl/ and https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/ or available from the authors upon request.