Observations of solar flares with IRIS and SDO
D. Li, D.E. Innes, and Z. J. Ning

TL;DR
This study compares IRIS and SDO observations of solar flares to determine the contribution of Fe xxi emission to AIA 131 channel signals, revealing that flare kernels have a significant fraction of cooler plasma emission.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the temperature structure of flare kernels using combined IRIS and SDO data, quantifying Fe xxi contributions in the AIA 131 channel.
Findings
Fe xxi EMs are 67-92% of AIA 131 EMs in loop regions.
In flare kernels, Fe xxi contributes 40-80% of the 131 emission.
Fe xxi line shows blue shifts up to 200 km/s in bright kernels.
Abstract
Context: Flare kernels brighten simultaneously in all SDO/AIA channels making it difficult to determine their temperature structure. IRIS is able to spectrally resolve Fe xxi emission from cold chromospheric brightenings, so can be used to infer the amount of Fe xxi emission in 131 channel. Aims: We use observations of two small solar flares seen by IRIS and SDO to compare the EMs deduced from the IRIS Fe xxi line and the AIA 131 channel to determine the fraction of Fe xxi emission in flare kernels in the 131 channel of AIA. Methods: Cotemporal and cospatial pseudo-raster AIA images are compared with the IRIS results.We use multi-Gaussian line fitting to separate the blending chromospheric emission so as to derive Fe xxi intensities and Doppler shifts in IRIS spectra. Results: We define loop and kernel regions based on the brightness of the 131 and 1600 {\AA} intensities. In the loop…
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