The structure of high-temperature flare plasma

Physics

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Scientific paper

In Paper I (Emslie, 1985) we derived ‘scaling laws’ which relate peak loop temperature to injected non-thermal electron flux in electron-heated models of the flare corona. In this paper, we compare these predicted relationships with recent coordinated observations in hard X-rays and soft X-rays. Satisfactory agreement is found for large events, while for smaller events the plasma electron temperature determined by soft X-ray spectral fitting is too high. We discuss a possible resolution of this apparent discrepancy through careful examination of the method used to determine the temperature of the soft X-ray emitting plasma. It is concluded that temperatures determined by spectral fitting over a series of lines are not necessarily representative of the true temperature of the plasma, since the fitting technique is plagued by the same difficulties as a more straightforward technique involving a single spectral line or portion of continuum (Craig and Brown, 1976). The differences between actual and derived temperatures are sufficiently large to remove the above discrepancy between observations and modeling of electron-heated coronae.

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