The contribution of microbunching instability to solar flare emission in the GHz to THz range of frequencies
J. Michael Klopf, Pierre Kaufmann, Jean-Pierre Raulin, S\'ergio, Szpigel

TL;DR
This paper proposes a microbunching instability mechanism that explains the double spectral components observed in solar flares, combining coherent and incoherent synchrotron emissions to match observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel ISR-CSR microbunching mechanism for solar flare emissions, supported by simulations fitting actual spectral observations.
Findings
Simulations successfully reproduce observed double spectra.
Microbunching can produce significant microwave emission.
The mechanism complements existing models for solar flare radiation.
Abstract
Recent solar flare observations in the sub-THz range have provided evidence of a new spectral component with fluxes increasing for larger frequencies, separated from the well-known microwave emission that maximizes in the GHz range. Suggested interpretations explain the THz spectral component, but do not account for the simultaneous microwave component. We present a mechanism for producing the observed double-spectra. Based on coherent enhancement of synchrotron emission at long wavelengths in laboratory accelerators, we consider how similar processes may occur within a solar flare. The instability known as microbunching arises from perturbations that produce electron beam density modulations, giving rise to broadband coherent synchrotron emission at wavelengths comparable to the characteristic size of the microbunch structure. The spectral intensity of this coherent synchrotron…
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