Submillimeter and X-ray observations of an X Class flare
C.G. Gimenez de Castro, G. Trottet, A. Silva-Valio, S. Krucker, J.E.R., Costa, P. Kaufmann, E. Correia, H. Levato

TL;DR
This study analyzes a rare X-class solar flare using combined submillimeter and X-ray observations, revealing complex magnetic topology, electron acceleration details, and spectral characteristics that enhance understanding of solar flare mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis of an X-class flare, including modeling of electron spectra and magnetic field estimates, which are novel insights into flare physics.
Findings
Relativistic electrons accelerated up to a few MeV.
Magnetic field above 500 G is required to suppress X-ray emission.
Electron spectrum shows a break around a few hundred keV.
Abstract
The GOES X1.5 class flare that occurred on August 30,2002 at 1327:30 UT is one of the few events detected so far at submillimeter wavelengths. We present a detailed analysis of this flare combining radio observations from 1.5 to 212 GHz (an upper limit of the flux is also provided at 405 GHz) and X-ray. Although the observations of radio emission up to 212 GHz indicates that relativistic electrons with energies of a few MeV were accelerated, no significant hard X-ray emission was detected by RHESSI above ~ 250 keV. Images at 12--20 and 50--100 keV reveal a very compact, but resolved, source of about ~ 10" x 10". EUV TRACE images show a multi-kernel structure suggesting a complex (multipolar) magnetic topology. During the peak time the radio spectrum shows an extended flatness from ~ 7 to 35 GHz. Modeling the optically thin part of the radio spectrum as gyrosynchrotron emission we…
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