An Extreme Solar Event of 20 January 2005: Properties of the Flare and the Origin of Energetic Particles
V. V. Grechnev (1), V. G. Kurt (2), I. M. Chertok (3), A. M. Uralov, (1), H. Nakajima (4), A. T. Altyntsev (1), A. V. Belov (3), B. Yu. Yushkov, (2), S. N. Kuznetsov (2), L. K. Kashapova (1), N. S. Meshalkina (1), N. P.

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the 2005 solar event, linking flare emissions to energetic particles and debating whether particles are accelerated in the flare or CME shock, with evidence favoring flare acceleration.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of the flare's properties and suggests that particle acceleration occurred mainly within the flare region, contributing to understanding SEP origins.
Findings
Flare emissions originated from a compact magnetic structure above sunspots.
Protons and electrons were accelerated within the active region's magnetic field.
The CME speed was high but similar to previous events, implying the flare's role in the event's extremity.
Abstract
The extreme solar and SEP event of 20 January 2005 is analyzed from two perspectives. Firstly, we study features of the main phase of the flare, when the strongest emissions from microwaves up to 200 MeV gamma-rays were observed. Secondly, we relate our results to a long-standing controversy on the origin of SEPs arriving at Earth, i.e., acceleration in flares, or shocks ahead of CMEs. All emissions from microwaves up to 2.22 MeV line gamma-rays during the main flare phase originated within a compact structure located just above sunspot umbrae. A huge radio burst with a frequency maximum at 30 GHz was observed, indicating the presence of a large number of energetic electrons in strong magnetic fields. Thus, protons and electrons responsible for flare emissions during its main phase were accelerated within the magnetic field of the active region. The leading, impulsive parts of the GLE,…
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