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Frequency Agile Solar Radiotelescope

Authors :
Dale E. Gary
Bin Chen
James F. Drake
Gregory D. Fleishman
Lindsay Glesener
Pascal Saint-Hilaire
Stephen M. White
Timothy Bastian
Sijie Yu
Surajit Mondal
Angelos Vourlidas
Stuart D. Bale
Sherry Chhabra
Christina M. S. Cohen
Craig DeForest
Juan Carlos Martinez Oliveros
Hantao Ji
Juan Camilo Buitrago-Casas
Shadia Habbal
Louis J. Lanzerotti
Shaheda Begum Shaik
Momchil Molnar
Gelu Nita
Gordon Emslie
Kevin Reardon
Fan Guo
Mitsuo Oka
Nariaki Nitta
Xudong Sun
Enrico Landi
Leon Ofman
Jeongwoo Lee
Hugh Hudson
Astrid Veronig
Jiong Qiu
KD Leka
John Harvey
Thomas Y. Chen
Spiro Kosta Antiochos
Ronald L Moore
Matthew West
Joel Timothy Dahlin
Alexander Georgievich Kosovichev
Delores Knipp
Xiaocan Li
Thomas Schad
Eduard Kontar
Laura Hayes
Vasyl Yurchyshyn
Chun Ming Mark Cheung
Valentin Martinez Pillet
Lucas Tarr
Judith Tobi Karpen
Amir Caspi
Albert Young-ming Shih
Tetsu Anan
Andrea Francesco Battaglia
Haosheng Lin
Meriem Alaoui Abdallaoui
Katharine K Reeves
Silvina E Guidoni
James Andrew Klimchuk
Jason Kooi
Maria Dmitriyevna Kazachenko
Samuel Tun Beltran
James McTiernan
Natsuha Kuroda
Samuel Schonfeld
Stephen Kahler
Cooper J Downs
Gianna Cauzzi
Sophie Musset
Chris R. Gilly
Ayumi Asai
Brian Welsch
Masumi Shimojo
Yuhong Fan
Satoshi Masuda
Brian ODonnell
Pankaj Kumar
Jeffrey W Brosius
Source :
Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2022.

Abstract

The Frequency Agile Solar Radiotelescope (FASR) has been strongly endorsed as a top community priority by both Astronomy & Astrophysics Decadal Surveys and Solar & Space Physics Decadal Surveys in the past two decades. Although it was developed to a high state of readiness in previous years (it went through a CATE analysis and was declared “doable now”), the NSF has not had the funding mechanisms in place to fund this mid-scale program. Now it does, and the community must seize this opportunity to modernize the FASR design and build the instrument in this decade. The concept and its science potential have been abundantly proven by the pathfinding Expanded Owens Valley Solar Array (EOVSA), which has demonstrated a small subset of FASR’s key capabilities such as dynamically measuring the evolving magnetic field in eruptive flares, the temporal and spatial evolution of the electron energy distribution in flares, and the extensive coupling among dynamic components (flare, flux rope, current sheet). The FASR concept, which is orders of magnitude more powerful than EOVSA, is low-risk and extremely high reward, exploiting a fundamentally new research domain in solar and space weather physics. Utilizing dynamic broadband imaging spectropolarimetry at radio wavelengths, with its unique sensitivity to coronal magnetic fields and to both thermal plasma and nonthermal electrons from large flares to extremely weak transients, the ground-based FASR will make synoptic measurements of the coronal magnetic field and map emissions from the chromosphere to the middle corona in 3D. With its high spatial, spectral, and temporal resolution, as well as its superior imaging fidelity and dynamic range, FASR is poised to provide a system-wide perspective on myriad coupled phenomena. FASR will be a highly complementary and synergistic component of solar and heliospheric observing capabilities that is critically needed to support the next generation of solar science.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society
Notes :
936723.02.01.10.90, , NNG09EK11I, , NNG19OB08A, , NNM07AA01C, , 80NSSC21M0180
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20220013994
Document Type :
Report