Solar Flare Measurements with STIX and MiSolFA
Diego Casadei

TL;DR
This paper proposes the MiSolFA X-ray detector, designed to work with ESA's Solar Orbiter's STIX instrument, to improve solar flare modeling by providing simultaneous, multi-directional observations and addressing previous data inconsistencies.
Contribution
Introduction of MiSolFA, a compact X-ray detector that works with STIX to enable multi-directional solar flare observations and resolve anisotropy measurement issues.
Findings
MiSolFA will enable simultaneous observations of all flare regions.
The combined data will improve understanding of X-ray emission anisotropy.
Cross-calibration with STIX will enhance data accuracy.
Abstract
Solar flares are the most powerful events in the solar system and the brightest sources of X-rays, often associated with emission of particles reaching the Earth and causing geomagnetic storms, giving problems to communication, airplanes and even black-outs. X-rays emitted by accelerated electrons are the most direct probe of solar flare phenomena. The Micro Solar-Flare Apparatus (MiSolFA) is a proposed compact X-ray detector which will address the two biggest issues in solar flare modeling. Dynamic range limitations prevent simultaneous spectroscopy with a single instrument of all X-ray emitting regions of a flare. In addition, most X-ray observations so far are inconsistent with the high anisotropy predicted by the models usually adopted for solar flares. Operated at the same time as the STIX instrument of the ESA Solar Orbiter mission, at the next solar maximum (2020), they will have…
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