On 10 March 2001 the active region NOAA 9368 produced an unusually impulsive
solar flare in close proximity to the solar limb. This flare has previously
been studied in great detail, with observations classifying it as a type 1
white-light flare with a very hard spectrum in hard X-rays. The flare was also
associated with a type II radio burst and coronal mass ejection. The flare
emission characteristics appeared to closely correspond with previous instances
of seismic emission from acoustically active flares. Using standard local
helioseismic methods, we identified the seismic signatures produced by the
flare that, to date, is the least energetic (in soft X-rays) of the flares
known to have generated a detectable acoustic transient. Holographic analysis
of the flare shows a compact acoustic source strongly correlated with the
impulsive hard X-ray, visible continuum, and radio emission. Time-distance
diagrams of the seismic waves emanating from the flare region also show faint
signatures, mainly in the eastern sector of the active region. The strong
spatial coincidence between the seismic source and the impulsive visible
continuum emission reinforces the theory that a substantial component of the
seismic emission seen is a result of sudden heating of the low photosphere
associated with the observed visible continuum emission. Furthermore, the
low-altitude magnetic loop structure inferred from potential--field
extrapolations in the flaring region suggests that there is a significant
inverse correlation between the seismicity of a flare and the height of the
magnetic loops that conduct the particle beams from the corona.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, Solar Physics Topical Issue: SOHO 19/GONG 2007
"Seismology of Magnetic Activity", Accepte