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Coronal Hard Xray emission

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Some nice picture. Some nice pictures (continued) 20 July 2002. X3.3 flare on ... Hard X-ray source extends to 20-30'' over limb which when added to occultation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coronal Hard Xray emission


1
Coronal Hard X-ray emission
  • Laura Ann Bone
  • February 2005

2
The standard model
3
Coronal hard X-ray Sources
  • First observed during the 1970s in occulted
    events.
  • E.g. Frost and Dennis (1971), Hudson (1978).
  • Often associated with a variety of
    multiwavelength phenomena particularly microwave
    emission.

4
Coronal HXR flares
  • Several flares studied
  • Typically show densities greater than 1011cm-3.
    Column densities greater than 1020 cm-3 .
  • All but highest energy electrons are stopped
    collisionally in the corona.

5
14/15th April 2002
  • M3.2 flare
  • Photon spectrum fitted by thermal plus broken
    power law (non-thermal).

6
Some nice picture
7
Some nice pictures (continued)
8
20 July 2002
  • X3.3 flare on eastern limb
  • Originates in active region over eastern limb,
    occulted by 10'' or 11000km
  • Hard X-ray source extends to 20-30'' over limb
    which when added to occultation height gives a
    source height of up to 30000km above photosphere.

9
Some even nicer pictures
10
Coronal HXR flares
  • Typically one to two orders of magnitude denser
    than normal flares.
  • Consistent with a coronal thick target
    interpretation
  • Loop column density N is capable of stopping
    electrons with Egt50KeV (by
  • )
  • In flares with steep spectral index almost all
    electrons stopped in corona, no footpoint
    emission


11
Coronal HXR flares
  • Increase in column density is attributed to
    evaporation of chromospheric matter by electron
    beams or thermal conduction.
  • Beam driven evaporation gives a value for N
    substantially less than the observed value (up to
    two orders of magnitude).

12
Coronal HXR flares
  • Alternatively conductive evaporation gives N in
    excellent agreement with observed values.
  • Therefore high N is probably a result of
    conductive evaporation.

13
Coronal HXR flares
  • Plotting of GOES flux reveals, in each case,
    preflare emission that would be capable of
    substantially increasing column density and
    Eloop.
  • Preflare phase is in need of further
    investigation.

14
Coronal HXR flares
15
Coronal HXR flares
  • Column density is already high at onset of
    impulsive phase
  • Preflare emission imaged by Nobeyama
    radioheliograph is consistent with emission in a
    set of nested loops in 14th/15th April flares.
  • In 20 July event emission in RHESSI is rising
    before onset of satellite night, GOES rises
    steadily throughout.

16
Coronal HXR flares
17
Summary
  • Coronal hard X-ray emission is caused by electron
    beams dumping most of their energy before they
    reach the chromosphere.
  • In flares with steep spectral indexes almost no
    footpoint emission is observed.
  • Densities are consistent with conductive, rather
    than beam driven evaporation.
  • Need to think of flare as a 3-d process to gain
    better understanding of these events.
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