On the faintest solar coronal hard X-rays observed with FOXSI
Juan Camilo Buitrago-Casas, Lindsay Glesener, Steven Christe, S\"am, Krucker, Juliana Vievering, P.S. Athiray, Sophie Musset, Lance Davis, Sasha, Courtade, Gregory Dalton, Paul Turin, Zoe Turin, Brian Ramsey, Stephen, Bongiorno, Daniel Ryan, Tadayuki Takahashi, Kento Furukawa

TL;DR
This paper reports on FOXSI-3's high-sensitivity observations of the quiet Sun's faint hard X-ray emissions, setting new upper limits that are consistent with previous constraints but achieved with significantly less observation time.
Contribution
The study demonstrates FOXSI-3's capability to constrain quiet Sun hard X-ray emissions more efficiently than previous instruments, paving the way for future direct detections.
Findings
FOXSI-3 set upper limits on quiet Sun HXRs at ~10^{-3} photons s^{-1} cm^{-2} keV^{-1} in 5-10 keV range.
FOXSI-3's constraints are consistent with previous RHESSI results but used 1/2640 of the observation time.
Results suggest future missions could detect or further constrain quiet Sun HXR emissions.
Abstract
Solar nanoflares are small eruptive events releasing magnetic energy in the quiet corona. If nanoflares follow the same physics as their larger counterparts, they should emit hard X-rays (HXRs) but with a rather faint intensity. A copious and continuous presence of nanoflares would deliver enormous amounts of energy into the solar corona, possibly accounting for its high temperatures. To date, there has not been any direct observation of such sustained and persistent HXRs from the quiescent Sun. However, Hannah et al. in 2010 constrained the quiet Sun HXR emission using almost 12 days of quiescent solar-off-pointing observations by RHESSI. These observations set upper limits at photons s cm keV and photons s cm keV for the 3-6 keV and 6-12 keV energy ranges, respectively. Observing feeble…
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