Abstract
We report on the detection of a large-scale radio structure and plasma
flow associated with a
bright point flare observed on 1993 July 11. The bright point (BP) flare
was simultaneously imaged
by
the Nobeyama radioheliograph at 17 GHz
and the Soft X-Ray Telescope
on board the Yohkoh
mission. The microwave emission consists of a large-scale structure and
a compact moving
source. The large-scale component seems to be the radio counterpart of
large-scale loop
structures sometimes observed in association with BP flares in X-rays.
The compact source
moved from the location of the X-ray BP flare with a speed of about 60
km s-1, which suggests a
plasma flow. Spatial comparison between X-ray and radio data shows that
the BP flare had
different manifestations in the two wavelength domains. The emission
peaks in the two
wavelength domains did not coincide, which suggests cool plasma flow
along the large-scale radio
structure. We were able to determine the temperature and emission
measure of the BP flare
plasma from the X-ray data, and thus we computed the expected radio flux
from the
X-ray--emitting plasma. We found that the computed radio flux was much
smaller than the total
observed radio flux.