Thermal to Nonthermal Energy Partition at the Early Rise Phase of Solar Flares
Alexander A. Altyntsev, Gregory D. Fleishman, Sergey V. Lesovoi,, Natalia S. Meshalkina

TL;DR
This study reveals that nonthermal electron acceleration occurs early in solar flares, with microwave emissions indicating fully developed nonthermal spectra despite limited X-ray detection, challenging existing flare energization models.
Contribution
It demonstrates early nonthermal electron acceleration in solar flares using microwave data, highlighting a discrepancy with traditional models that emphasize thermal heating.
Findings
Nonthermal microwave emission appears early in flares.
High-frequency spectrum is dominated by nonthermal electrons.
Electron acceleration is fully operational despite low seed particle injection.
Abstract
In some flares the thermal component appears much earlier than the nonthermal component in X-ray range. Using sensitive microwave observations we revisit this finding made by Battaglia et al. (2009) based on RHESSI data analysis. We have found that nonthermal microwave emission produced by accelerated electrons with energy of at least several hundred keV, appears as early as the thermal soft X-ray emission indicative that the electron acceleration takes place at the very early flare phase. The non-detection of the hard X-rays at that early stage of the flares is, thus, an artifact of a limited RHESSI sensitivity. In all considered events, the microwave emission intensity increases at the early flare phase. We found that either thermal or nonthermal gyrosynchrotron emission can dominate the low-frequency part of the microwave spectrum below the spectral peak occurring at 3-10 GHz. In…
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