Implications for electron acceleration and transport from non-thermal electron rates at looptop and footpoint sources in solar flares
Paulo J. A. Sim\~oes, Eduard P. Kontar

TL;DR
This study analyzes spatially resolved X-ray observations of solar flares to understand electron acceleration, revealing that electrons are predominantly trapped in the coronal looptop, which influences their transport to footpoints.
Contribution
It provides new quantitative insights into electron rates and trapping mechanisms in solar flare sources using advanced imaging spectroscopy techniques.
Findings
Electron rates at the looptop are 1.7-8 times higher than at footpoints.
Electrons are trapped in the coronal loops due to magnetic effects.
Results constrain models of particle transport and trapping in solar flares.
Abstract
The interrelation of hard X-ray (HXR) emitting sources and the underlying physics of electron acceleration and transport presents one of the major questions in high-energy solar flare physics. Spatially resolved observations of solar flares often demonstrate the presence of well-separated sources of bremsstrahlung emission, so-called coronal and footpoint sources. Using spatially resolved X-ray observations by the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) and recently improved imaging techniques, we investigate in detail the spatially resolved electron distributions in a few well-observed solar flares. The selected flares can be interpreted as having a standard geometry with chromospheric HXR footpoint sources related to thick-target X-ray emission and the coronal sources characterised by a combination of thermal and thin-target bremsstrahlung. Using imaging…
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