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arxiv: 1105.2839 · v1 · pith:IGJEA3S3new · submitted 2011-05-13 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR · astro-ph.HE· physics.plasm-ph· physics.space-ph

RHESSI Line and Continuum Observations of Super-hot Flare Plasma

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR astro-ph.HEphysics.plasm-phphysics.space-ph
keywords flareplasmasuper-hotthermalcontinuumcomponentcomponentsdistinct
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We use RHESSI high-resolution imaging and spectroscopy observations from ~5 to 100 keV to characterize the hot thermal plasma during the 2002 July 23 X4.8 flare. These measurements of the steeply falling thermal X-ray continuum are well fit throughout the flare by two distinct isothermal components: a super-hot (T > 30 MK) component that peaks at ~44 MK and a lower-altitude hot (T < 25 MK) component whose temperature and emission measure closely track those derived from GOES measurements. The two components appear to be spatially distinct, and their evolution suggests that the super-hot plasma originates in the corona, while the GOES plasma results from chromospheric evaporation. Throughout the flare, the measured fluxes and ratio of the Fe and Fe-Ni excitation line complexes at ~6.7 and ~8 keV show a close dependence on the super-hot continuum temperature. During the pre-impulsive phase, when the coronal thermal and non-thermal continua overlap both spectrally and spatially, we use this relationship to obtain limits on the thermal and non-thermal emission.

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