Solar Flare X-ray Source Motion as a Response to Electron Spectral Hardening
A. O'Flannagain, P. Gallagher, J. Brown, R. Milligan, G. Holman

TL;DR
This study tests the collisional thick target model by comparing predicted and observed hard X-ray source motions during a solar flare, confirming that spectral hardening correlates with downward source motion.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the collisional thick target model accurately predicts the downward motion of HXR sources during spectral hardening in solar flares, validated through detailed observations and modeling.
Findings
Good agreement between model and observed source heights.
Spectral hardening correlates with downward source motion.
Thermal emission can mask nonthermal source motions.
Abstract
Context: Solar flare hard X-rays (HXRs) are thought to be produced by nonthermal coronal electrons stopping in the chromosphere, or remaining trapped in the corona. The collisional thick target model (CTTM) predicts that sources produced by harder power-law injection spectra should appear further down the legs or footpoints of a flare loop. Therefore, hardening of the injected power-law electron spectrum during flare onset should be concurrent with a descending hard X-ray source. Aims: To test this implication of the CTTM by comparing its predicted HXR source locations with those derived from observations of a solar flare which exhibits a nonthermally-dominated spectrum before the peak in HXRs, known as an early impulsive event. Methods: HXR images and spectra of an early impulsive C-class flare were obtained using the Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI). Images…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
