Abstract
The Solar Extreme-ultraviolet Rocket Telescope and Spectrograph flown
successfully on 1997
November 18 at 19:35 UT and an observing campaign was conducted to
support the flight.
Coordinated observations were obtained by SOHO and YOHKOH and many
ground based
instruments. Radio observations were obtained by the Very Large Array
(VLA) and the
Nobeyama Radioheliograph in microwaves.
The SERTS target was the
trailing portion of a large
active region (NOAA AR 8108) close to the disk center (N19E17 at 19:40
UT on 1997 November
18). The VLA obtained microwave images at 20, 6 and 3.6 cm wavelengths
with a spatial
resolution of about 40", 12" and 7" respectively.
The Nobeyama images
(spatial resolution 10")
were obtained a few hours later at 1.7 cm. The microwave images (in
total intensity and circular
polarization) provide information on the physical conditions
(temperature, density and magnetic
field) in the active region corona and in sunspots at various heights
above the solar surface. The
AR was relatively quiet during the SERTS flight, so we can determine its
quiescent properties.
We present preliminary radio images of AR 8108 and the physical
conditions derived from them.
We thank T. Bastian for help in obtaining VLA observing time. This
research was supported by
NASA grant NAG-5-6139.