We analyze the occurrence frequency distributions of peak fluxes P, total
fluxes E, and durations T of solar flares over the last three solar cycles
(during 1980--2010) from hard X-ray data of HXRBS/SMM, BATSE/CGRO, and RHESSI.
From the synthesized data we find powerlaw slopes with mean values of
αP=1.72±0.08 for the peak flux, αE=1.60±0.14 for the total
flux, and αT=1.98±0.35 for flare durations. We find a systematic
anti-correlation of the powerlaw slope of peak fluxes as a function of the
solar cycle, varying with an approximate sinusoidal variation
αP(t)=α0+Δαcos[2π(t−t0)/Tcycle], with a
mean of α0=1.73, a variation of Δα=0.14, a solar cycle
period Tcycle=12.6 yrs, and a cycle minimum time t0=1984.1. The
powerlaw slope is flattest during the maximum of a solar cycle, which indicates
a higher magnetic complexity of the solar corona that leads to an
overproportional rate of powerful flares.Comment: subm. to Solar Physic