Flare Energy Release in the Magnetic Field Polarity Inversion Line During M1.2 Solar Flare of March 15, 2015. Paper I. Onset of Plasma Heating and Electrons Acceleration
I.N. Sharykin, I.V. Zimovets, I.I. Myshyakov, N.S. Meshalkina

TL;DR
This study analyzes the energy release, plasma heating, and electron acceleration during the March 15, 2015 M1.2 solar flare, highlighting magnetic reconnection in the polarity inversion line and the need for advanced 3D flare models.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational insights into electron acceleration and plasma heating in a twisted magnetic flux rope during a solar flare, emphasizing the complexity of energy release mechanisms.
Findings
Electrons are accelerated in a thin magnetic channel with high magnetic field.
Super-hot plasma reaches temperatures up to 40 MK.
Energy flux of non-thermal electrons exceeds current model predictions.
Abstract
We present the study of SOL2015-03-15 M1.2 flare, revealing acceleration of electrons and plasma heating in the sheared twisted magnetic structure in the polarity inversion line (PIL). The scope is to make the analysis of nonthermal electrons dynamics and plasma heating in the highly stressed magnetic loops interacting in the PIL by using X-ray, microwave, ultraviolet, and optical observations. It is found that the most probable scenario for the energy release in the PIL is the tether-cutting magnetic reconnection between the low-lying (3 Mm above the photosphere) magnetic loops within a twisted magnetic flux rope. Energetic electrons with the hardest spectrum were appeared at the onset of plasma heating up to the super-hot temperature of 40 MK. These electrons are localized in a thin magnetic channel with width of around 0.5 Mm with high average magnetic field of about 1200 G. The…
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