SXT Status Report August 9 - August 30, 1998 (Weeks 33-35) D. Alexander, H. Hudson SUMMARY Activity was moderate to high. There were minor operational problems but SXT has operated well. The Whole Sun Fortnight (successor to the Whole Sun Month campaign of 1996) took place amid the high activity. SOLAR ACTIVITY The GOES background level (see the plots, for example, on our weekly SXT Web pages at http://www.solar.isas.ac.jp/sxt_co/index.html) remained above mid-B level, approaching the C level at times. In fact, during Aug. 30 the GOES level was almost continuously above C! There were at least 5 X flares and 9 M flares; Yohkoh unfortunately missed the interesting part of the event of August 24, an event with great geoeffective potential. Large spot groups have been present continuously, with AR 8307 reaching almost 600 millionths. All the commentators are predicting major activity. OBSERVING CAMPAIGNS The major effort during this period, guided on the SXT side by D. Alexander, has been the Whole Sun Fortnight program (see http://sohops.gsfc.nasa.gov/whole_sun/HOMEPAGE/WSM2/plans.html and http://www.solar.isas.ac.jp/~alexande/WSF/observations.html). This effort will have produced data quite strikingly different from those obtained in the original Whole Sun Month, which took place during solar minimum conditions of mid-1996. SXT also observed the particularly well-situated eclipse of August 21-22, visible on Earth in the South Pacific. For Yohkoh observations see http://isasxa.solar.isas.ac.jp/~hudson/aug98_eclipse.html (predictions) and ftp://isass0.solar.isas.ac.jp/pub/sxt_co/980829.html (results). Unfortunately this operation, as has happened before, resulted in a temporary spacecraft mis-pointing. Recovery from this condition has been slow because it occurred during a period of relatively poor visibility for the star Canopus, the fundamental roll calibration reference for Yohkoh. SXT INSTRUMENT STATUS AND CALIBRATION ACTIVITIES The terminator program has continued successfully. No new Yohkoh re-pointings were necessary. SCIENCE The new "science nuggets" consist of: 29-Aug-98: Solar eclipse: 22-Aug-98 22-Aug-98: X4 eruptive flare 15-Aug-98: WSF Campaign -- Loop Brightening Observed by SXT and TRACE The URL's for these and the full list of science nuggets is on http://www.solar.isas.ac.jp/sxt_co/index.html, and the current week is also always kept on http://www.solar.isas.ac.jp/sxt_co/SXTweekly.html. OPERATIONS ISSUES KSC passes lost to other ISAS spacecraft: Week 33: 6 passes lost to Akebono Week 34: 5 passes lost to Akebono, 1 to HALCA Week 35: 2 passes lost to Akebono, 6 to HALCA The competing ISAS spacecraft now include Nozomi (the Mars mission) as well as Akebono, ASCA, and HALCA. A Nozomi delta-V maneuver is cheduled for 28-29 August. VISITORS AND PERSONNEL Hugh Hudson was away from ISAS during most of the period. SEMINARS July 27 - G. Simnett (University of Birmingham): "Corotating Interaction Regions-Sources and Manifestations" July 27 - D. Alexander (Lockheed): "Magnetic Bananas and the Non-Force-Free Corona" Both of these are rich subjects related to the development of the solar magnetic field above its photospheric boundary, and in the solar wind. Simnett will return for a further discussion on Sept. 10. The bananas referred to in Alexander's title are different bananas from those to be found on the APOD Web page http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap980629.html. TOHBANS Tohbans for Week 33 SSOC : Sakura, Hata KSC : Kano, Saito-Y SXT_CO: Alexander SXT_SW: Slater, Shirts Tohbans for Week 34 SSOC : Nishio, Watanabe_Te KSC : Kano, Hanaoka SXT_CO: Alexander SXT_SW: - Tohbans for Week 35 SSOC : Liu, Akita KSC : Hanaoka, Ashizawa SXT_CO: Alexander, Hudson SXT_SW: -