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Published February 10, 2021 | Accepted Version + Published
Journal Article Open

NuSTAR Observation of Energy Release in 11 Solar Microflares

Abstract

Solar flares are explosive releases of magnetic energy. Hard X-ray (HXR) flare emission originates from both hot (millions of Kelvin) plasma and nonthermal accelerated particles, giving insight into flare energy release. The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope ARray (NuSTAR) utilizes direct-focusing optics to attain much higher sensitivity in the HXR range than that of previous indirect imagers. This paper presents 11 NuSTAR microflares from two active regions (AR 12671 on 2017 August 21 and AR 12712 on 2018 May 29). The temporal, spatial, and energetic properties of each are discussed in context with previously published HXR brightenings. They are seen to display several "large flare" properties, such as impulsive time profiles and earlier peak times in higher-energy HXRs. For two events where the active region background could be removed, microflare emission did not display spatial complexity; differing NuSTAR energy ranges had equivalent emission centroids. Finally, spectral fitting showed a high-energy excess over a single thermal model in all events. This excess was consistent with additional higher-temperature plasma volumes in 10/11 microflares and only with an accelerated particle distribution in the last. Previous NuSTAR studies focused on one or a few microflares at a time, making this the first to collectively examine a sizable number of events. Additionally, this paper introduces an observed variation in the NuSTAR gain unique to the extremely low livetime (<1%) regime and establishes a correction method to be used in future NuSTAR solar spectral analysis.

Additional Information

© 2021 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2020 August 28; revised 2020 October 22; accepted 2020 November 11; published 2021 February 9. This work was supported under an NSF Faculty Development Grant (AGS-1429512) to the University of Minnesota, the 2019 NASA Fellowship Program (80NSSC19k1687), an NSF CAREER award (NSF-AGS-1752268), the SolFER DRIVE center (80NSSC20K0627), and the NASA NuSTAR Guest Observer program (80NSSC18K1744). I.G.H is supported by a Royal Society University Fellowship. The authors also wish to thank Pascal Saint-Hilaire for help with eclipse predictions in planning the 2017 August 21 NuSTAR observation.

Attached Files

Published - Duncan_2021_ApJ_908_29.pdf

Accepted Version - 2011.06651.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023