STIX X-ray microflare observations during the Solar Orbiter commissioning phase
Andrea Francesco Battaglia, Jonas Saqri, Paolo Massa, Emma, Perracchione, Ewan C. M. Dickson, Hualin Xiao, Astrid M. Veronig, Alexander, Warmuth, Marina Battaglia, Gordon J. Hurford, Aline Meuris, Olivier Limousin,, L\'aszl\'o Etesi, Shane A. Maloney, Richard A. Schwartz

TL;DR
STIX observed microflares during Solar Orbiter's commissioning, revealing insights into their spectral and temporal evolution and confirming the instrument's capability to detect small-scale solar flares.
Contribution
First analysis of microflares with STIX during commissioning, demonstrating its sensitivity and providing initial spectral and timing insights into small solar flares.
Findings
STIX detects flares as small as GOES A class.
Peak emission at low energies occurs during the impulsive phase.
Thermal emission dominates the largest microflare's low-energy peak.
Abstract
The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) is the HXR instrument onboard Solar Orbiter designed to observe solar flares over a broad range of flare sizes, between 4-150 keV. We report the first STIX observations of microflares recorded during the instrument commissioning phase in order to investigate the STIX performance at its detection limit. This first result paper focuses on the temporal and spectral evolution of STIX microflares occuring in the AR12765 in June 2020, and compares the STIX measurements with GOES/XRS, SDO/AIA, and Hinode/XRT. For the observed microflares of the GOES A and B class, the STIX peak time at lowest energies is located in the impulsive phase of the flares, well before the GOES peak time. Such a behavior can either be explained by the higher sensitivity of STIX to higher temperatures compared to GOES, or due to the existence of a nonthermal…
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