Quasi-Periodic Pulsations in Solar Flares: new clues from the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
D. Gruber, P. Lachowicz, E. Bissaldi, M.S. Briggs, V. Connaughton, J., Greiner, A. J. van der Horst, G. Kanbach, A. Rau, P. N. Bhat, R. Diehl, A., von Kienlin, R. M. Kippen, C. A. Meegan, W. S. Paciesas, R. D. Preece, C., Wilson-Hodge

TL;DR
This study investigates quasi-periodic pulsations in solar flares using Fermi GBM data, finding no significant intrinsic QPPs when accounting for red-noise, thus challenging previous claims of such periodicities.
Contribution
The paper applies a rigorous PSD analysis method, accounting for red-noise, to solar flare data from Fermi GBM, providing a more reliable assessment of QPP presence.
Findings
No significant intrinsic QPPs detected in four bright solar flares
Instrumental periodicity confirmed in RHESSI data
Emphasizes importance of red-noise correction in QPP analysis
Abstract
In the last four decades it has been observed that solar flares show quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) from the lowest, i.e. radio, to the highest, i.e. gamma-ray, part of the electromagnetic spectrum. To this day, it is still unclear which mechanism creates such QPPs. In this paper, we analyze four bright solar flares which show compelling signatures of quasi-periodic behavior and were observed with the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (\gbm) onboard the Fermi satellite. Because GBM covers over 3 decades in energy (8 keV to 40 MeV) it can be a key instrument to understand the physical processes which drive solar flares. We tested for periodicity in the time series of the solar flares observed by GBM by applying a classical periodogram analysis. However, contrary to previous authors, we did not detrend the raw light curve before creating the power spectral density spectrum (PSD). To assess the…
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