Radiative losses in the chromosphere during a C-class flare
Rahul Yadav, J. de la Cruz Rodr\'iguez, Graham S. Kerr, C. J. D\'iaz, Baso, Jorrit Leenaarts

TL;DR
This study quantifies the radiative energy losses in the chromosphere during a C-class solar flare, providing observational constraints and comparing them with RADYN simulations to improve understanding of energy transport mechanisms.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed estimation of chromospheric radiative losses during a C-class flare and compares these observations with RADYN models to refine flare energy transport understanding.
Findings
Ca IR triplet lines dominate radiative losses in the chromosphere.
Radiative losses peak at flare maximum, reaching up to 175 kW/m^2.
The best model fit uses an injected energy flux of 5×10^{10} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2}.
Abstract
Solar flares release an enormous amount of energy into the corona. A substantial fraction of this energy is transported to the lower atmosphere, which results in chromospheric heating. The mechanisms that transport energy to the lower solar atmosphere during a flare are still not fully understood. We aim to estimate the temporal evolution of the radiative losses in the chromosphere at the footpoints of a C-class flare, in order to set observational constraints on the electron beam parameters of a RADYN flare simulation. We estimated the radiative losses from hydrogen, and singly ionized Ca and Mg using semi-empirical model atmospheres. To estimate the integrated radiative losses in the chromosphere the net cooling rates were integrated between the temperature minimum and the height where the temperature reaches 10 kK. The stratification of the net cooling rate suggests that the Ca IR…
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