Title: Group V: Report
1Group V Report
- Regular Members K. Arzner, A. Benz, C. Dauphin,
G. Emslie, M. Onofri, N. Vilmer, L. Vlahos - Visitors E. Kontar, G. Mann, R. Lin, V. Zharkova
2Main Goals
- Constrains on particle acceleration from the
RHESSI data (close collaboration with all WGs)
and other available sources of information on
high energy particles - Discuss new theories on particle acceleration
- Connecting theories on particle acceleration with
the global magnetic topologies hosting flares and
CMEs
3Constraints on Acceleration/Transport(Electrons)
- Must produce an electron flux of at least 1037
electrons per second - Must be able to accelerate electrons on time
scales at most 10 milliseconds - Must sometimes produce electron energies greater
than at least 10s of GeV - Mechanism must be able to produce a flattening of
the electron distribution at energies on the
order of 500 keV - Higher nonthermal hard X-ray flux statistically
associated with harder spectra
4The Electron Problem
- Efficiency of bremsstrahlung production 10-5
(ergs of X-rays per erg of electrons) - ?Electron flux 105 ? hard X-ray flux
- Electron energy can be 1032 1033 ergs in large
events - Total number of accelerated electrons up to 1040
(cf. number of electrons in loop 1038). - replenishment and current closure necessary
5Revised Numbers
6 X/?? -ray spectrum
Thermal components
T 2 10 7 K T 4 10 7 K
Electron bremsstrahlung
Ultrarelativistic Electron Bremsstrahlung
?-ray lines (ions gt 3 MeV/nuc)
SMM/GRS Phebus/Granat Observations GAMMA1 GRO GONG
Pion decay radiation (ions gt 100
MeV/nuc) sometimes with neutrons
RHESSI Energy range
7Electron-Dominated Events
- First observed with SMM (Rieger et al, 1993)
- Short duration (s to 10 s)
- high energy (gt 10 MeV) bremsstrahlung emission
- No detectable GRL flux
- Photon spectrum gt 1 MeV (?X?-1.52.0)
- For 2 PHEBUS events
- if Wigt1MeV/nuc ? Wegt20 keV
- No detectable GRL above continuum
- Weak GRL flares?
Vilmer et al (1999)
BATSE
PHEBUS
8non-thermal
thermal
RHESSI two component fits T, EM ?, F35
9spectral index
flux
Grigis B.
10Energy dependent photon spectral index
Interval 3 (peak of the flare)
Spectral index evolution
11Mean Electron Spectrum Temporal evolution
1
3
5
RHESSI Lightcurves 3-12keV 12-25keV 25-50keV 50
-300keV
2
4
Temporal evolution of the Regularized Mean
Electron Spectrum (20s time intervals)
3
1
2
5
4
12Non-thermal preflare coronal sources
13 RHESSI SPECTRA 5-50 keV Thermalbroken
powerlaw Preflare period 010200-011100
- Broken powerlaw extends down to 5 keV
- Thermal component never dominates
- EM and T are poorly determined
- Chisquare 1 if EM0
-
(NB similar source in July 23rd 2002 event)
White photons, Green thermal model, Red
broken powerlaw, Purple background
14Electron spectrum at 1AU
Typical electron spectrum can be fitted with
broken power law Break around 30-100
keV Steeper at higher energies
Oakley, Krucker, Lin 2004
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16Ions
- Tens of MeV ions and hundreds of MeV particles
can be accelerated at the same time - We also see cases where we see a stage when
hundreds of MeV ions are primarily accelerated.
17g-ray line emission can be delayed from hard
X-rays from lt2 to 10s of sec.
50- 180 keV
275- 325 keV
4 6.4 MeV
-----20 sec----
50- 180 keV
275- 325 keV
4 6.4 MeV
------100 sec------
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19June 3, 1982 - Evidence for delayed high-energy
emission
20Constraints for Theory
- Radio spectral features and flares
- Connection between hard X-ray features and spikes
in the range 300-3000 MHz, corresponding to
densities of 109 -1011, has always been a
promising diagnostic of energy release - But there are some aspects hard to understand
frequently the spikes occur in a narrow frequency
range for 10s of seconds, implying a fixed
density in the energy release site. Energy
release widespread over a large volume would
produce spikes over a wide frequency (i.e.
density) range - Wide range of burst types in this frequency range
is hard to understand what controls frequency
drift rates of different features?
21Radio Emission at Decimetric Wavelengths
22Constraints for Theory
- Magnetic configuration of flares in the low
corona - See configurations of all types in radio images
single loops, double loops, complex
configurations - Frequently see magnetic connections over very
large spatial scales - Magnetic field strength spectra typically imply
500-1000 G in the radio source - But radio spectra are frequently flat-topped
hard to model, range of fields in the source
(need FASR) - See both prompt precipitation, implying either
rapid scattering of electron pitch angles or
loops with little height dependence for B, and
trapping, where radio is strong but X-rays are
weak, implying little pitch angle scattering.
23Radio Flare Loop
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26are the magnetic and kinetic Reynolds numbers.
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28t (s)
29Energy spectra e (blue) and p (black)upper
panel neutral, middle semi-neutral, lower
fully separated beams
1.8 for p 2.2 for e
1.8 for p 2.2 for e
1.7 for p 4-5 for e
4-5 for p 2.0 for e
1.5 for p
1.8 for e
30The suggested scheme of proton/electron
acceleration and precipitation
31Electron Acceleration in Solar Flares
basic question particle acceleration in
the solar corona energetic electrons ?
non-thermal radio and X-ray radiation
- electron acceleration mechanisms
- ? direct electric field acceleration (DC
acceleration) - (Holman, 1985 Benz, 1987 Litvinenko,
2000 - Zaitsev et al., 2000)
- ? stochastic acceleration via
- wave-particle interaction
- (Melrose, 1994 Miller et al., 1997)
-
- ? shock waves
- (Holman Pesses,1983 Schlickeiser, 1984
- Mann Claßen, 1995 Mann et al., 2001)
- ? outflow from the reconnection site
- (termination shock)
- (Forbes, 1986 Tsuneta
Naito, 1998 - Aurass, Vrsnak Mann, 2002)
HXR looptop
HXR footpoints
32Outflow Shock Signatures During the Impulsive
Phase
Solar Event of October 28, 2003
- X17.2 flare
- RHESSI INTEGRAL data (Gros et al. 2004)
- termination shock radio signatures start
- at the time of impulsive HXR rise
- signatures end when impulsive
- HXR burst drops off
The event was able to produce electrons up to 10
MeV.
33Discussion I
basic coronal parameters at 150 MHz (? 160 Mm
for 2 x Newkirk (1961)) (Dulk McLean,
1978) (flare plasma)
shock parameter
total electron flux through the shock
34Summary
- ? The termination shock is able to efficiently
generate energetic electrons - up to 10 MeV.
- ? Electrons accelerated at the termination
shock could be the source of - nonthermal hard X- and ?-ray radiation in
chromospheric footpoints - as well as in coronal loop top sources.
- The same mechanism also allows to produce
energetic protons (lt 16 GeV).
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41Summary
- The constrains on the acceleration are becoming
so many and the ability of a single acceleration
to handle all this become impossible- No unique
acceleration - Shocks, stochastic E-Fields and turbulent
acceleration enters into the picture - Synchronized from photosheric motions complex
magnetic topologies maybe be the answer