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Precise timing of solar flare footpoint sources from mid-infrared observations (2406.11361v1)

Published 17 Jun 2024 in astro-ph.SR

Abstract: Solar flares are powerful particle accelerators, and in the accepted standard flare model most of the flare energy is transported from a coronal energy-release region by accelerated electrons which stop collisionally in the chromosphere, heating and ionising the plasma, producing a broadband enhancement to the solar radiative output. We present a time-delay analysis of the infrared emission from two chromospheric sources in the flare SOL2014-09-24T17:50 taken at the McMath-Pierce telescope. By cross-correlating the intensity signals, measured with 1s cadence, from the two spatially resolved infrared sources we find a delay of 0.75 $\pm$ 0.07 s at 8.2 $\mu$m, where the uncertainties are quantified by a Monte Carlo analysis. The sources correlate well in brightness but have a time lag larger than can be reasonably explained by the energy transport dominated by non-thermal electrons precipitating from a single acceleration site in the corona. If interpreted as a time-of-flight difference between electrons traveling to each footpoint, we estimate time delays between 0.14 s and 0.42 s, for a reconnection site at the interior quasi-separatrix layer or at the null-point of the spine-fan topology inferred for this event. We employed modelling of electron transport via time-dependent Fokker-Planck and radiative hydrodynamic simulations to evaluate other possible sources of time-delay in the generation of the IR emission, such as differing ionisation timescales under different chromospheric conditions. Our results demonstrate that they are also unable to account for this discrepancy. This flare appears to require energy transport by some means other than electron beams originating in the corona.

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