Radio and Hard X-Ray Imaging Observations of the M5.7 Flare of 2002 March 14

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

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Sun: Corona, Sun: Flares, Sun: Radio Radiation, Sun: X-Rays, Gamma Rays

Scientific paper

We describe a flare of GOES class M5.7 that was observed simultaneously by RHESSI (Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager) and NoRH (Nobeyama Radio Heliograph). The flare occurred in AR 9866 located near the disk center. The hard X-ray (HXR), microwave, EIT, and TRACE 195 Å observations indicate that the flaring region consisted of a complex of multiple loops. In the microwave domain the source morphology, the timing, the polarization characteristics, and the photospheric magnetic fields clearly indicate that it is of a class characterized as a ``double loop'' configuration, meaning two systems of magnetic flux, each consisting of many smaller loops. The observations suggest the existence of a small loop system created by the emergence of new flux, which interacts with an old flux system, and of a remote flare site that is observed primarily in radio. The former is the main flare site where we observe microwave, HXR, and EUV emissions. In HXR there are two main identifiable loop systems. The first is an elongated one filled with energetic electrons primarily emitting lower energy (12-25 keV) HXR with a colocated microwave source; this source has distinct footpoints at higher X-ray energies. The second loop system is implied by compact HXR sources in opposite magnetic polarities separated by a distance greater than the length of the first loop system. Spectroscopic analysis of the RHESSI data shows that the spectrum can be fitted with a thick-target model with a thermal component and a broken power-law component of the electron energy distribution. This model is used to address the thermal/nonthermal and radio/HXR electron number problems.

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