Time delays in quasi-periodic pulsations observed during the X2.2 solar flare on 2011 February 15
L. Dolla, C. Marqu\'e, D. B. Seaton, T. Van Doorsselaere, M., Dominique, D. Berghmans, C. Cabanas, A. De Groof, W. Schmutz, A. Verdini, M., J. West, J. Zender, A. N. Zhukov

TL;DR
This study analyzes quasi-periodic pulsations during a major solar flare, revealing distinct time lags across multiple wavebands and proposing mechanisms like electron trapping to explain these observations.
Contribution
It presents the first report of time lags between EUV and SXR fluctuations on 1-30 second scales during a solar flare, with multi-wavelength analysis and source identification.
Findings
Different wavebands show specific time lags during the flare.
Two distinct sources exhibited different lag behaviors in radio observations.
First observation of EUV and SXR fluctuation lags on these time scales.
Abstract
We report observations of quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) during the X2.2 flare of 2011 February 15, observed simultaneously in several wavebands. We focus on fluctuations on time scale 1-30 s and find different time lags between different wavebands. During the impulsive phase, the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) channels in the range 25-100 keV lead all the other channels. They are followed by the Nobeyama RadioPolarimeters at 9 and 17 GHz and the Extreme Ultra-Violet (EUV) channels of the Euv SpectroPhotometer (ESP) onboard the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO). The Zirconium and Aluminum filter channels of the Large Yield Radiometer (LYRA) onboard the Project for On-Board Autonomy (PROBA2) satellite and the SXR channel of ESP follow. The largest lags occur in observations from the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES), where the channel…
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