The flaring and quiescent components of the solar corona
C. Argiroffi (1, 2), G. Peres (1, 2), S. Orlando (2), F. Reale, (1, 2) ((1) Dip. di Scienze Fisiche ed Astronomiche, Universita` di, Palermo, Italy, (2) INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo, Italy)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the contribution of solar flares to the solar corona's emission measure distribution, supporting the idea that unresolved flares cause the hot peak seen in active stellar coronae, with implications for understanding stellar activity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the average flare contribution to the solar EM(T), linking solar and stellar coronae and supporting the unresolved flare hypothesis for hot emission peaks.
Findings
EM_F(T) peaks at 5-10 MK, larger than EM_Q(T)
The solar EM(T) is double-peaked, similar to active stars
Supports the hypothesis that unresolved flares cause hot EM peaks
Abstract
The solar corona is a template to understand stellar activity. The Sun is a moderately active star, and its corona differs from active stars: active stellar coronae have a double-peaked EM(T) with the hot peak at 8-20 MK, while the non flaring solar corona has one peak at 1-2 MK. We study the average contribution of flares to the solar EM(T) to investigate indirectly the hypothesis that the hot peak of the EM(T) of active stellar coronae is due to a large number of unresolved solar-like flares, and to infer properties on the flare distribution from nano- to macro-flares. We measure the disk-integrated time-averaged emission measure, EM_F(T), of an unbiased sample of solar flares analyzing uninterrupted GOES/XRS light curves over time intervals of one month. We obtain the EM_Q(T) of quiescent corona for the same time intervals from the Yohkoh/SXT data. To investigate how EM_F(T) and…
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