Direct observation of the energy release site in a solar flare by SDO/AIA, Hinode/EIS and RHESSI
Paulo J. A. Sim\~oes, David R. Graham, Lyndsay Fletcher

TL;DR
This study provides direct observational evidence pinpointing the main energy release site in a solar flare using multi-instrument imaging and spectroscopy, revealing detailed plasma dynamics and energy release mechanisms.
Contribution
It is the first to combine imaging and spectroscopic data from SDO/AIA, Hinode/EIS, and RHESSI to directly observe the energy release site in a non-eruptive solar flare.
Findings
Coronal source exhibits impulsive thermal and non-thermal emission.
Source plasma temperature peaks at 12-13 MK before X-ray peak.
Downflows of 40-250 km/s indicate loop shrinkage or outflows.
Abstract
We present direct evidence for the detection of the main energy release site in a non-eruptive solar flare, SOL2013-11-09T06:38UT. This GOES C2.7 event was characterised by two flaring ribbons and a compact, bright coronal source located between them, which is the focus of our study. We use imaging from SDO/AIA, and imaging spectroscopy from RHESSI to characterise the thermal and non-thermal emission from the coronal source, and EUV spectroscopy from the Hinode/EIS, which scanned the coronal source during the impulsive peak, to analyse Doppler shifts in Fe XII and Fe XXIV emission lines, and determine the source density. The coronal source exhibited an impulsive emission lightcurve in all AIA filters during the impulsive phase. RHESSI hard X-ray images indicate both thermal and non-thermal emission at the coronal source, and its plasma temperature derived from RHESSI imaging…
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