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Simulation of Quiet-Sun Hard X-Rays Related to Solar Wind Superhalo Electrons
by
Hannah, Iain
, Wang, Wen
, Wang, Linghua
, Krucker, Säm
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
/ Atmospheric Sciences
/ Electrons
/ Energy loss
/ Flares
/ Mathematical models
/ Physics
/ Physics and Astronomy
/ Simulation
/ Solar atmosphere
/ Solar cycles
/ Solar energy
/ Solar flares
/ Solar physics
/ Solar wind
/ Space Exploration and Astronautics
/ Space Sciences (including Extraterrestrial Physics
/ Spectra
/ Sun
/ X-rays
2016
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Simulation of Quiet-Sun Hard X-Rays Related to Solar Wind Superhalo Electrons
by
Hannah, Iain
, Wang, Wen
, Wang, Linghua
, Krucker, Säm
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
/ Atmospheric Sciences
/ Electrons
/ Energy loss
/ Flares
/ Mathematical models
/ Physics
/ Physics and Astronomy
/ Simulation
/ Solar atmosphere
/ Solar cycles
/ Solar energy
/ Solar flares
/ Solar physics
/ Solar wind
/ Space Exploration and Astronautics
/ Space Sciences (including Extraterrestrial Physics
/ Spectra
/ Sun
/ X-rays
2016
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Simulation of Quiet-Sun Hard X-Rays Related to Solar Wind Superhalo Electrons
by
Hannah, Iain
, Wang, Wen
, Wang, Linghua
, Krucker, Säm
in
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
/ Atmospheric Sciences
/ Electrons
/ Energy loss
/ Flares
/ Mathematical models
/ Physics
/ Physics and Astronomy
/ Simulation
/ Solar atmosphere
/ Solar cycles
/ Solar energy
/ Solar flares
/ Solar physics
/ Solar wind
/ Space Exploration and Astronautics
/ Space Sciences (including Extraterrestrial Physics
/ Spectra
/ Sun
/ X-rays
2016
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Simulation of Quiet-Sun Hard X-Rays Related to Solar Wind Superhalo Electrons
Journal Article
Simulation of Quiet-Sun Hard X-Rays Related to Solar Wind Superhalo Electrons
2016
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Overview
In this paper, we propose that the accelerated electrons in the quiet Sun could collide with the solar atmosphere to emit Hard X-rays (HXRs) via non-thermal bremsstrahlung, while some of these electrons would move upwards and escape into the interplanetary medium, to form a superhalo electron population measured in the solar wind. After considering the electron energy loss due to Coulomb collisions and the ambipolar electrostatic potential, we find that the sources of the superhalo could only occur high in the corona (at a heliocentric altitude
≳
1.9
R
⊙
(the mean radius of the Sun)), to remain a power-law shape of electron spectrum as observed by
Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory
(STEREO) at 1 AU near solar minimum (Wang
et al.
in
Astrophys. J. Lett.
753
, L23,
2012
). The modeled quiet-Sun HXRs related to the superhalo electrons fit well to a power-law spectrum,
f
∼
ε
−
γ
in the photon energy
ε
, with an index
γ
≈
2.0
–
2.3
(3.3 – 3.7) at 10 – 100 keV, for the warm/cold-thick-target (thin-target) emissions produced by the downward-traveling (upward-traveling) accelerated electrons. These simulated quiet-Sun spectra are significantly harder than the observed spectra of most solar HXR flares. Assuming that the quiet-Sun sources cover 5 % of the solar surface, the modeled thin-target HXRs are more than six orders of magnitude weaker than the
Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager
(RHESSI) upper limit for quiet-Sun HXRs (Hannah
et al.
in
Astrophys. J.
724
, 487,
2010
). Using the thick-target model for the downward-traveling electrons, the RHESSI upper limit restricts the number of downward-traveling electrons to at most
≈
3
times the number of escaping electrons. This ratio is fundamentally different from what is observed during solar flares associated with escaping electrons where the fraction of downward-traveling electrons dominates by a factor of 100 to 1000 over the escaping population.
Publisher
Springer Netherlands,Springer Nature B.V
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