Deducing Electron Properties From Hard X-Ray Observations
E.P. Kontar, J.C. Brown, A.G. Emslie, W. Hajdas, G.D. Holman, G. J., Hurford, J. Kasparova, P. C. V. Mallik, A. M. Massone, M. L. McConnell, M., Piana, M. Prato, E. J. Schmahl, and E. Suarez-Garcia

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in deducing properties of energetic electrons in solar flares from hard X-ray observations, highlighting new inference techniques and detailed flare morphology insights from RHESSI data.
Contribution
It presents novel methods for inferring electron energy and angular distributions from X-ray data, improving understanding of particle acceleration and propagation in solar flares.
Findings
First-time inference of electron angular distributions using albedo.
Improved, model-independent electron energy spectra and emission measures.
Revealed detailed solar flare morphology through imaging spectroscopy.
Abstract
X-radiation from energetic electrons is the prime diagnostic of flare-accelerated electrons. The observed X-ray flux (and polarization state) is fundamentally a convolution of the cross-section for the hard X-ray emission process(es) in question with the electron distribution function, which is in turn a function of energy, direction, spatial location and time. To address the problems of particle propagation and acceleration one needs to infer as much information as possible on this electron distribution function, through a deconvolution of this fundamental relationship. This review presents recent progress toward this goal using spectroscopic, imaging and polarization measurements, primarily from the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI). Previous conclusions regarding the energy, angular (pitch angle) and spatial distributions of energetic electrons in solar…
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