Abstract
The Nobeyama Radioheliograph,
a radio interferometer dedicated for solar
observations, is
designed to be suitable for observations of solar flares. However, its
wide field of view and high
dynamic range enable us to study prominence eruptions. In contrast to H
alpha, 17 GHz images
are not affected by Doppler shift due to the motion of prominences.
We found evidence that temperature of prominences increases at their
eruptions in two events on
1992 November 5 and on 1994 February 20. A prominence on the disk is
observed as a dark
filament at 17 GHz, because the temperature of a prominence is lower
than that of the disk. At the
two events analyzed, prominences apparently disappear, after they start
to erupt. However, when
the prominences pass plage regions, they ``hide'' the plages. This fact
means that the prominence
is still optically thick during eruptions but they are heated up to the
temperature of the disk.
Heating of prominence material is important to consider the relation
between the eruption of cool
matter seen in H alpha and that of hot matter seen in He-lines and
white-light corona.