1976
DOI: 10.1007/bf00152264
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Some comments on flares after many years of observation

Abstract: Ground based observations of flares are reviewed to seek implications for a flare build-up on either a long or a short time scale. Plots of flare frequency and importance for certain individual centers of activity suggest a possible crescendo in flare occurrence days and hours before the development of large and significant flares. The X-ray records follow the same; pattern of apparent build-up. A possible dependence between successive major flares, as phases one and two of a single complex flare event, sugges… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…However, there are certainly some cases of flares with non-random spacings in time. This is somewhat reminiscent of a phenomenon which occurs in the Sun, viz., the occasional crescendo in flare occurrence during an interval of some hours or days preceding large flares; Dodson and Hedeman (1976). Gershberg, 1970;translation, p. 28).…”
Section: Observations Of Stellar Flaresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, there are certainly some cases of flares with non-random spacings in time. This is somewhat reminiscent of a phenomenon which occurs in the Sun, viz., the occasional crescendo in flare occurrence during an interval of some hours or days preceding large flares; Dodson and Hedeman (1976). Gershberg, 1970;translation, p. 28).…”
Section: Observations Of Stellar Flaresmentioning
confidence: 99%