Analysis of Quiescent Corona X-ray Spectra from SphinX during the 2009 Solar Minimum
B. Sylwester, J. Sylwester, M. Siarkowski, K. J. H. Phillips, P., Podgorski, M. Gryciuk

TL;DR
This study analyzed the 2009 solar minimum's quiescent corona X-ray spectra using SphinX, revealing multiple temperature components and showing no evidence of nano-flare heating, with improved data analysis over previous studies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed spectral analysis of the quiet solar corona during deep minimum using enhanced SphinX data, identifying multiple temperature components and refining previous models.
Findings
Identification of multiple temperature components in the corona.
Absence of a very hot nano-flare heating signature.
Spectral similarities to post-minimum observations.
Abstract
The SphinX X-ray spectrophotometer on the {\em CORONAS-PHOTON}\/ mission observed the 1~--~15\,keV X-ray spectrum of the spatially integrated solar corona during the deep minimum of 2009, when solar activity was exceptionally low. Its sensitivity for energies \,keV was higher than that of any other solar X-ray spectrometer in orbit at the time, including the detectors on GOES. Using much improved instrumental data than was used previously, we analyzed SphinX spectra in 576 intervals for which there was no discernible activity (NA), 40 intervals when there were X-ray brightenings (B), and sixteen intervals when there were micro-flares with peak emission less than GOES A1 (F). An instrumental background spectrum, formed over 34 hours of spacecraft night-time periods and including electronic noise and particle radiation, was subtracted from the solar spectra. Theoretical spectra…
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