Report from ISAS 22 - 28 August 1994 Nariaki Nitta SUMMARY The Solar activity was very low after the flare-productive region AR 7765 rotated behind the western limb. We made attempts to observe a filament or filament channel, but did not a satisfactory result. A Yohkoh extended seminar "Solar Neighborhood Meeting" was quite successful. OPERATIONS We had to give up two passes on Friday, because KSC had power outage due to a thunder storm. Otherwise, everything went well with the operations, especially thanks to one of the SSOC tohbans, S. Masuda, who understands all the details of Yohkoh operations as well as the loop-top hard X-ray source. JPL may have wondered why we asked them for retransmission of so many data. The gateway computer at ISAS to receive the DSN data has a limited memory. It no longer receives the data if some amount of data stay unprocessed. This happened during the holiday season here, when there was hardly anybody to create Sirius database. However, there seems to be another problem. Even after re-transmission, some data turned out not to be readable. Clearly, this problem is being investigated here. SOLAR ACTIVITY What a change from last week! There were just a few low-B class flares, and the GOES light curve was almost fixed at the A1 level. In the latter half of the week, I found more X-ray bright points than usual, wondering why we were not running an XBP campaign. Does anybody keep track of the number of XBPs? It does not necessarily appear to be anti-correlated with the GOES level. I recall we saw many XBPs also in June 1992, when the activity was not yet at a bottom level. As of today (29 August), a bright region is turning up on the east limb. PERSONNEL Marilyn Bruner arrived. She will serve as SXT Chief Observer during the important period of coordinating with Spartan. Gary Linford departed after dealing with many problems around the workstations. SCIENCE Further progress was made by Mukul Kundu, Hugh Hudson and Nariaki Nitta on the association of type III bursts with X-ray jets/flares. Kundu and Nitta almost finalized a paper on two flares that were observed by HXT, and started comparing the images of sunspots obtained by SXT and the Nobeyama Radio Heliograph. Marilyn Bruner joined Hudson and Nitta in a so-far not rewarding attempt of observing a filament or filament channel in the SXT PFIs, in addition to unloading the data that were obtained during her rocket flight on 12 May 1992. Incidentally, those campaigners outside ISAS can now easily find how the SXT is operating, by fingering campaign@isass0.solar.isas.ac.jp. Hudson volunteered to update the information on a nearly daily basis. SEMINAR As announced before, Hudson and Nitta organized a Yohkoh extended (full-day) seminar, called the first Solar Neighborhood Meeting (24 August). We had often felt that there were two few interactions with the Japanese scientists, particularly with non-senior people, who will perhaps become central force of Solar-B. Most local graduate students associated with Yohkoh science not only attended the seminar but made quite nice presentations in English. Indeed, 12 out of a total of 19 talks were by graduate students. Kundu told me he was impressed at the general quality of their talks. We will probably need to do something like this every six months.