On the Instrumental Discrepancies in Lyman-alpha Observations of Solar Flares
Harry J. Greatorex, Ryan O. Milligan, Ingolf E. Dammasch

TL;DR
This study compares Lyα observations of solar flares from multiple instruments, revealing significant discrepancies in measurements like contrast and energy estimates, which impact multi-instrument analysis and energy budget calculations.
Contribution
It highlights instrumental discrepancies in Lyα flare observations and provides guidance for interpreting multi-instrument data in future solar studies.
Findings
Discrepancies in contrast and energetics can be up to a factor of five.
Relative flux measurements are generally consistent across instruments.
Instrumental differences significantly affect the interpretation of flare energetics.
Abstract
Despite the energetic significance of Lyman-alpha (Ly{\alpha}; 1216\AA) emission from solar flares, regular observations of flare related Ly{\alpha} have been relatively scarce until recently. Advances in instrumental capabilities and a shift in focus over previous Solar Cycles mean it is now routinely possible to take regular co-observations of Ly{\alpha} emission in solar flares. Thus, it is valuable to examine how the instruments selected for flare observations may influence the conclusions drawn from the analysis of their unique measurements. Here, we examine three M-class flares each observed in Ly{\alpha} by GOES-14/EUVS-E, GOES-15/EUVS-E, or GOES-16/EXIS-EUVS-B, and at least one other instrument from PROBA2/LYRA, MAVEN/EUVM, ASO-S/LST-SDI, and SDO/EVE-MEGS-P. For each flare, the relative and excess flux, contrast, total energy, and timings of the Ly{\alpha} emission were compared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
