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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Flare Observations

TLDR
In this article, a review of recent observations in EUV, soft and hard X-rays, white light, and radio waves is presented, showing that solar flares remain a complex problem of astrophysics including major unsolved questions.
Abstract
Solar flares are observed at all wavelengths from decameter radio waves to gamma-rays beyond 1 GeV. This review focuses on recent observations in EUV, soft and hard X-rays, white light, and radio waves. Space missions such as RHESSI, Yohkoh, TRACE, SOHO, and more recently Hinode and SDO have enlarged widely the observational base. They have revealed a number of surprises: Coronal sources appear before the hard X-ray emission in chromospheric footpoints, major flare acceleration sites appear to be independent of coronal mass ejections, electrons, and ions may be accelerated at different sites, there are at least 3 different magnetic topologies, and basic characteristics vary from small to large flares. Recent progress also includes improved insights into the flare energy partition, on the location(s) of energy release, tests of energy release scenarios and particle acceleration. The interplay of observations with theory is important to deduce the geometry and to disentangle the various processes involved. There is increasing evidence supporting magnetic reconnection as the basic cause. While this process has become generally accepted as the trigger, it is still controversial how it converts a considerable fraction of the energy into non-thermal particles. Flare-like processes may be responsible for large-scale restructuring of the magnetic field in the corona as well as for its heating. Large flares influence interplanetary space and substantially affect the Earth’s ionosphere. Flare scenarios have slowly converged over the past decades, but every new observation still reveals major unexpected results, demonstrating that solar flares, after 150 years since their discovery, remain a complex problem of astrophysics including major unsolved questions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Solar Cycle

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Journal ArticleDOI

Coronal Mass Ejections: Observations

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The Exoplanet Handbook

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Solar Orbiter mission. Science overview

TL;DR: The first mission of ESA's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 programme and a mission of international collaboration between ESA and NASA, was launched on 10 February 2020 04:03 UTC from Cape Canaveral and aims to address key questions of solar and heliospheric physics pertaining to how the Sun creates and controls the Heliosphere, and why solar activity changes with time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coronal Loops: Observations and Modeling of Confined Plasma

TL;DR: In this article, a review of coronal loops is presented, with a focus on loops mostly as structures confining plasma, and a brief discussion about stellar X-ray emitting structures related to coronal loop structures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (Rhessi)

TL;DR: RHESSI as discussed by the authors is a Principal Investigator (PI) mission, where the PI is responsible for all aspects of the mission except the launch vehicle, and is designed to investigate particle acceleration and energy release in solar flares, through imaging and spectroscopy of hard X-ray/gamma-ray continua emitted by energetic electrons, and of gamma-ray lines produced by energetic ions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanoflares and the solar X-ray corona

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the X-ray corona is created by the dissipation at the many tangential discontinuities arising spontaneously in the bipolar fields of the active regions of the sun as a consequence of random continuous motion of the footpoints of the field in the photospheric convection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic reconnection in the corona and the loop prominence phenomenon

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the theoretical consequences to be expected during the extended relaxation phase which must follow such events, characterized by a gradual reconnection of the outward-distended field lines.
Journal ArticleDOI

A loop-top hard X-ray source in a compact solar flare as evidence for magnetic reconnection

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the reconnection region as the site of particle acceleration, suggesting that the basic physics of the magnetic reconnection process may be common to both types of flares.
Book

Magnetic Reconnection: MHD Theory and Applications

TL;DR: Magnetic reconnection is at the core of many dynamic phenomena in the universe, such as solar flares, geomagnetic substorms and tokamak disruptions as discussed by the authors.
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