Multi-wavelength observations and modelling of a canonical solar flare
Claire L. Raftery, Peter T. Gallagher, Ryan O. Milligan, James A., Klimchuk

TL;DR
This study combines multi-wavelength observations and hydrodynamic modeling to analyze the temperature, plasma flows, and energy loss mechanisms during a canonical solar flare, revealing the roles of conduction and non-thermal heating.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of a solar flare using combined spectroscopic, broad-band data, and the EBTEL model, highlighting the importance of conduction and non-thermal heating.
Findings
Conduction dominates early decay phase energy loss.
Explosive chromospheric evaporation observed during impulsive phase.
Both conductive and non-thermal heating are crucial during flare evolution.
Abstract
This paper investigates the temporal evolution of temperature, emission measure, energy loss and velocity in a C-class solar flare from both an observational and theoretical perspective. The properties of the flare were derived by following the systematic cooling of the plasma through the response functions of a number of instruments -- RHESSI (>5 MK), GOES-12 (5-30 MK), TRACE 171 A (1 MK) and SOHO/CDS (~0.03-8 MK). These measurements were studied in combination with simulations from the 0-D EBTEL model. At the flare on-set, upflows of ~90 km s-1 and low level emission were observed in Fe XIX, consistent with pre-flare heating and gentle chromospheric evaporation. During the impulsive phase, upflows of ~80 km s-1 in Fe XIX and simultaneous downflows of 20 km s-1 in He I and O V were observed, indicating explosive chromospheric evaporation. The plasma was subsequently found to reach a…
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