RESIK and RHESSI observations of the 20 September 2002 flare
A. Kepa, R. Falewicz, M. Siarkowski, and M. Pietras

TL;DR
This study compares RESIK and RHESSI X-ray observations of the 2002 solar flare, using hydrodynamic models to interpret plasma conditions and assess instrument calibration, providing insights into flare physics.
Contribution
It presents a combined analysis of RESIK and RHESSI data with hydrodynamic modeling to better understand flare plasma dynamics and instrument calibration issues.
Findings
Synthetic spectra match observations within a factor of two.
Hydrodynamic models effectively reproduce flare plasma evolution.
Calibration uncertainties affect spectral flux comparisons.
Abstract
Soft X-ray spectra 3.33 A - 6.15 A from the RESIK instrument on CORONAS-F constitute a unique database for the study of the physical conditions of solar flare plasmas, enabling the calculation of differential emission measures. The two RESIK channels for the shortest wavelengths overlap with the lower end of RHESSI spectral energy range, which is located around 3 keV, making it possible to compare both data sets. We aim to compare observations from RESIK and RHESSI spectrometers and cross-correlate these instruments. Observations are compared with synthetic spectra calculated based on the results of one-dimensional hydrodynamical (1D-HD) modelling. The analysis was performed for the flare on 20 September 2002. We estimated the geometry of the flaring loop, necessary for 1D-HD modelling, based on images from RHESSI and SOHO/EIT. The distribution of non-thermal electrons (NTEs) was…
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