A Large-scale Plume in an X-Class Solar Flare
Gregory D. Fleishman, Gelu M. Nita, Dale E. Gary

TL;DR
This study reports the detection and analysis of a large-scale solar plume during an X-class flare, revealing how nonthermal electrons escape through open and closed magnetic fields, influencing solar energetic particle fluxes.
Contribution
It introduces multi-frequency radio observations combined with 3D modeling to analyze large-scale solar plumes and their role in particle escape during flares.
Findings
Large-scale plume detected during an X-class flare.
Significant fraction of nonthermal electrons escape to the plume.
Proportion of open and closed fields influences SEP escape.
Abstract
Ever-increasing multi-frequency imaging of solar observations suggests that solar flares often involve more than one magnetic fluxtube. Some of the fluxtubes are closed, while others can contain open field. The relative proportion of nonthermal electrons among those distinct loops is highly important for understanding the energy release, particle acceleration, and transport. The access of nonthermal electrons to the open field is further important as the open field facilitates the solar energetic particle (SEP) escape from the flaring site, and thus controls the SEP fluxes in the solar system, both directly and as seed particles for further acceleration. The large-scale fluxtubes are often filled with a tenuous plasma, which is difficult to detect in either EUV or X-ray wavelengths; however, they can dominate at low radio frequencies, where a modest component of nonthermal electrons can…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
