Solar flare hard X-ray spikes observed by RHESSI: a case study
J. Qiu, J. X. Cheng, G. J. Hurford, Y. Xu, H. Wang

TL;DR
This study analyzes rapid hard X-ray spikes during solar flares observed by RHESSI, revealing their temporal, spectral, and spatial characteristics, and associating them with small-scale magnetic structures and footpoints.
Contribution
It introduces a new demodulation technique for analyzing RHESSI data and provides detailed spatial and spectral analysis of X-ray spikes in solar flares.
Findings
X-ray spikes last less than 1 second with sharp rise and decay.
Spikes are associated with double foot-point sources in opposite magnetic polarities.
Spikes exhibit harder spectra than underlying components.
Abstract
In this paper, we analyze hard X-ray spikes observed by RHESSI to understand their temporal, spectral, and spatial properties. A recently developed demodulation code was applied to hard X-ray light curves in several energy bands observed by RHESSI. Hard X-ray spikes were selected from the demodulated flare light curves. We measured the spike duration, the energy-dependent time delay, and count spectral index of these spikes. We also located the hard X-ray source emitting these spikes from RHESSI mapping that was coordinated with imaging observations in visible and UV wavelengths. We identify quickly varying structures of <1 s during the rise of hard X-rays in five flares. These hard X-ray spikes can be observed at photon energies over 100 keV. They exhibit sharp rise and decay with a duration (FWHM) of less than 1 s. Energy-dependent time lags are present in some spikes. It is seen that…
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