Spatial Fragmentation of the Microwave Emission in a
Geoeffective Flare
V. Grechnev(Nobeyama Radio Observatory), R. Sych, A.
Altyntsev, E. Afraimovich \newline(Institute of Solar-Terrestrial Physics,
Irkutsk, Russia)
A powerful geoeffective flare(3B/M7.1), which occurred on
1998 September~23 in the active region NOAA~8340, was studied using microwave
and Yohkoh/HXT data. The microwave emission of the flare was recorded at the
Siberian Solar Radio Telescope(SSRT, 5.2~cm)with the spatial resolution
of$18^{\prime\prime}$and the temporal resolution of 0.7~sec.
A set of short bursts was detected in the initial stage of
the flare. They had a common source, but were distributed over the flare
region. Rapid brightness variations of components of the source corresponded to
each group of short bursts. Their continuous spatial variations
reached$2^{\prime}$with the average apparent velocity of$10^4$~km~s$^{-1}$.
Possible mechanisms responsible for the generation of the
moving microwave sources are discussed.
High correlation was found between perturbations of the
total electron content in the Earth's ionosphere and the time profile of the
hard X-ray emission of this flare.