Abstract

The analysis of the Nobeyama Radio Heliograph (NRH) data at 17 GHz have revealed a new remarkable feature: an existence of large-scale (comparable with the size of the solar disk) chains shining at microwaves. Such chains can be seen clearly at the NRH images with a restricted range of the brightness temperature (for example, for T_{b} <= 2 times 10^{4} K) when the most intense sources are suppressed. The blobs consisting the chains are characterized by the angular sizes of 30-60 arcseconds and the brightness temperature of about T_{b} ~(11-15) times 10^{3} K. At least two types of the microwave chains should be distinguished. Firstly, there are so-called long-living chains which exist and keep their general form during many days, stretch from one active region to another remote active region/plage and rotate together with these formations. The microwave chains of the second type with a characteristic time scale of tens of hours appear to be associated with coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and post-CME energy release that are revealed, in particular, by long-duration events (LDEs) in the soft X-ray and microwave ranges. In some cases, such events are accompanied by strong changes of the form and location of the pre-existing chains, especially near the LDE source. In other cases, new chains and cells arise also in an extended region around the LDE source. The comparison with other solar images and maps shows that the form and location of the microwave chains (particularly, of the long-living ones) may coincide with sharp boundaries of coronal holes, observed with Yohkoh/SXT. They may outline also footpoint lines of some large X-ray arcades and correspond to the general picture of large-scale magnetic fields and filaments. In the latter case, the chains repeat the form of the corresponding filaments but are located at considerable distance from these filaments. These features mean that some large-scale structures shine at microwaves as a result of energy release associated either with long-term evolution of large-scale magnetic fields or with disturbances of extended magnetic fields identified with CMEs. The most probable mechanism responsible for the radio emission of the blobs forming the chains is the thermal free-free emission. The more detailed study of this phenomenon and especially detailed comparisons with other solar images and magnetograms are in progress.