The coronal volume of energetic particles in solar flares as revealed by microwave imaging
Gregory D. Fleishman, Maria A. Loukitcheva, Varvara Yu. Kopnina, Gelu, M. Nita, and Dale E. Gary

TL;DR
This study uses multi-frequency microwave imaging from OVSA and RHESSI to analyze the coronal volume of energetic particles in solar flares, revealing the effects of self-absorption, Razin suppression, and source size on low-frequency spectra.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of microwave source sizes and spectral effects in solar flares, enhancing understanding of particle acceleration and plasma conditions.
Findings
Many sources are large at low frequencies, affecting particle escape.
Four events show dominance of gyrosynchrotron self-absorption.
Razin suppression influences the spectra in other events.
Abstract
The spectrum of gyrosynchrotron emission from solar flares generally peaks in the microwave range. Its optically-thin, high-frequency component, above the spectral peak, is often used for diagnostics of the nonthermal electrons and the magnetic field in the radio source. Under favorable conditions, its low-frequency counterpart brings additional, complementary information about these parameters as well as thermal plasma diagnostics, either through gyrosynchrotron self-absorption, free-free absorption by the thermal plasma, or the suppression of emission through the so-called Razin effect. However, their effects on the low-frequency spectrum are often masked by spatial nonuniformity. To disentangle the various contributions to low-frequency gyrosynchrotron emission, a combination of spectral and imaging data is needed. To this end, we have investigated Owens Valley Solar Array (OVSA)…
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