New Observations of the Solar 0.5-5 keV Soft X-ray Spectrum
Amir Caspi, Thomas N. Woods, Harry P. Warren

TL;DR
This study presents new soft X-ray spectral measurements of the Sun, revealing high-temperature emissions and elemental abundance variations that inform coronal heating models and impact Earth's ionospheric studies.
Contribution
It introduces a new spectrometer measurement of solar SXR spectra between 0.5-5 keV, filling an observational gap and providing data supporting nanoflare heating models.
Findings
Observed SXR emission is much higher during weak activity than in 2009 minimum.
Spectra indicate significant high-temperature plasma consistent with nanoflare models.
Elemental abundance ratios suggest variations linked to coronal heating processes.
Abstract
The solar corona is orders of magnitude hotter than the underlying photosphere, but how the corona attains such high temperatures is still not understood. Soft X-ray (SXR) emission provides important diagnostics for thermal processes in the high-temperature corona, and is also an important driver of ionospheric dynamics at Earth. There is a crucial observational gap between ~0.2 and ~4 keV, outside the ranges of existing spectrometers. We present observations from a new SXR spectrometer, the Amptek X123-SDD, which measured the spatially-integrated solar spectral irradiance from ~0.5 to ~5 keV, with ~0.15 keV FWHM resolution, during sounding rocket flights on 2012 June 23 and 2013 October 21. These measurements show that the highly variable SXR emission is orders of magnitude greater than that during the deep minimum of 2009, even with only weak activity. The observed spectra show…
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