What are the Sources of Solar Energetic Particles? Element Abundances and Source Plasma Temperatures
Donald V. Reames

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of solar energetic particles by analyzing element abundances and source plasma temperatures, distinguishing between flare-accelerated impulsive events and shock-accelerated gradual events.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the source plasma temperatures and element abundance patterns in different SEP event types, supported by observational and modeling evidence.
Findings
Impulsive SEP sources have plasma temperatures of 2-4 MK.
Gradual SEP sources have plasma temperatures of 0.8-1.6 MK.
Element abundances vary with FIP and A/Q ratios across SEP types.
Abstract
We have spent 50 years in heated discussion over which populations of solar energetic particles (SEPs) are accelerated at flares and which by shock waves driven out from the Sun by coronal mass ejections (CMEs). The association of the large "gradual" SEP events with shock acceleration is supported by the extensive spatial distribution of SEPs and by the delayed acceleration of the particles. The relative abundances of the elements in these gradual events are a measure of those in the ambient solar corona, differing from those in the photosphere by a widely-observed function of the first ionization potential (FIP) of the elements. SEP events we call "impulsive", the traditional "3He-rich" events with enhanced heavy-element abundances, are associated with type III radio bursts, flares, and narrow CMEs; they selectively populate flux tubes that thread a localized source, and they are fit…
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