3 research outputs found
Origin of the submillimeter radio emission during the time-extended phase of a solar flare
Solar flares observed in the 200-400 GHz radio domain may exhibit a slowly
varying and time-extended component which follows a short (few minutes)
impulsive phase and which lasts for a few tens of minutes to more than one
hour. The few examples discussed in the literature indicate that such
long-lasting submillimeter emission is most likely thermal bremsstrahlung. We
present a detailed analysis of the time-extended phase of the 2003 October 27
(M6.7) flare, combining 1-345 GHz total-flux radio measurements with X-ray,
EUV, and H{\alpha} observations. We find that the time-extended radio emission
is, as expected, radiated by thermal bremsstrahlung. Up to 230 GHz, it is
entirely produced in the corona by hot and cool materials at 7-16 MK and 1-3
MK, respectively. At 345 GHz, there is an additional contribution from
chromospheric material at a few 10^4 K. These results, which may also apply to
other millimeter-submillimeter radio events, are not consistent with the
expectations from standard semi-empirical models of the chromosphere and
transition region during flares, which predict observable radio emission from
the chromosphere at all frequencies where the corona is transparent.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figure