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Main Authors: Battaglia, Andrea Francesco, Krucker, Säm, Veronig, Astrid M., Stiefel, Muriel Zoë, Warmuth, Alexander, Benz, Arnold O., Ryan, Daniel F., Collier, Hannah, Harra, Louise
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14466
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author Battaglia, Andrea Francesco
Krucker, Säm
Veronig, Astrid M.
Stiefel, Muriel Zoë
Warmuth, Alexander
Benz, Arnold O.
Ryan, Daniel F.
Collier, Hannah
Harra, Louise
author_facet Battaglia, Andrea Francesco
Krucker, Säm
Veronig, Astrid M.
Stiefel, Muriel Zoë
Warmuth, Alexander
Benz, Arnold O.
Ryan, Daniel F.
Collier, Hannah
Harra, Louise
contents In general, large solar flares are more efficient at accelerating high-energy electrons than microflares. Nonetheless, we sometimes observe microflares that accelerate electrons to high energies. We statistically characterize 39 microflares with strikingly hard spectra in the hard X-ray (HXR) range, which means that they are efficient in accelerating high-energy electrons. We refer to these events as "hard microflares." The statistical analysis is built upon spectral and imaging information from STIX, combined with EUV and magnetic field maps from SDO. The key observational result is that all hard microflares in this dataset have one of the footpoints rooted directly within a sunspot (either in the umbra or the penumbra). This clearly indicates that the underlying magnetic flux densities are large. For the events with the classic two-footpoints morphology, the absolute value of the mean line-of-sight magnetic flux density (and vector magnetic field strength) at the footpoint rooted within the sunspot ranges from 600 to 1800 G (1500 to 2500 G), whereas the outer footpoint measures from 10 to 200 G (100 to 400 G), therefore about 10 times weaker. Approximately 78% of hard microflares, which exhibited two HXR footpoints, have similar or even stronger HXR flux from the footpoint rooted within the sunspot. This contradicts the magnetic mirroring scenario. In addition, about 74% of the events could be approximated by a single loop geometry, demonstrating that hard microflares typically have a relatively simple morphology. We conclude that all hard microflares are rooted in sunspots, which implies that the magnetic field strength plays a key role in efficiently accelerating high-energy electrons, with hard HXR spectra associated with strong fields. This key result will allow us to further constrain our understanding of the electron acceleration mechanisms in flares and space plasmas.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_14466
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The observational evidence that all microflares that accelerate electrons to high energies are rooted in sunspots
Battaglia, Andrea Francesco
Krucker, Säm
Veronig, Astrid M.
Stiefel, Muriel Zoë
Warmuth, Alexander
Benz, Arnold O.
Ryan, Daniel F.
Collier, Hannah
Harra, Louise
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
In general, large solar flares are more efficient at accelerating high-energy electrons than microflares. Nonetheless, we sometimes observe microflares that accelerate electrons to high energies. We statistically characterize 39 microflares with strikingly hard spectra in the hard X-ray (HXR) range, which means that they are efficient in accelerating high-energy electrons. We refer to these events as "hard microflares." The statistical analysis is built upon spectral and imaging information from STIX, combined with EUV and magnetic field maps from SDO. The key observational result is that all hard microflares in this dataset have one of the footpoints rooted directly within a sunspot (either in the umbra or the penumbra). This clearly indicates that the underlying magnetic flux densities are large. For the events with the classic two-footpoints morphology, the absolute value of the mean line-of-sight magnetic flux density (and vector magnetic field strength) at the footpoint rooted within the sunspot ranges from 600 to 1800 G (1500 to 2500 G), whereas the outer footpoint measures from 10 to 200 G (100 to 400 G), therefore about 10 times weaker. Approximately 78% of hard microflares, which exhibited two HXR footpoints, have similar or even stronger HXR flux from the footpoint rooted within the sunspot. This contradicts the magnetic mirroring scenario. In addition, about 74% of the events could be approximated by a single loop geometry, demonstrating that hard microflares typically have a relatively simple morphology. We conclude that all hard microflares are rooted in sunspots, which implies that the magnetic field strength plays a key role in efficiently accelerating high-energy electrons, with hard HXR spectra associated with strong fields. This key result will allow us to further constrain our understanding of the electron acceleration mechanisms in flares and space plasmas.
title The observational evidence that all microflares that accelerate electrons to high energies are rooted in sunspots
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14466