Recurrent pulse trains in the solar hard X-ray flare of 1980 June 7
Abstract
This study presents a detailed examination of the solar hard X-ray and gamma-ray flare of 1980 June 7 as seen by the Hard X-Ray Burst Spectrometer on SMM. The hard X-ray profile is most unusual in that it is characterized by an initial pulse train of seven intense hard X-ray spikes. However, the event is unique among the 6300 events observed by HXRBS in that the temporal signature of this pulse train recurs twice during the flare. Examinations of the hard X-ray data in conjunction with radio and gamma-ray observations show that the 28-480 keV X-ray emission is simultaneous with the 17 GHz microwave fluxes within 128 ms and that the 3.5-6.5 MeV prompt gamma-ray line emission is coincident with secondary maxima of the microwave and X-ray fluxes. Although the absence of spatially resolved hard X-ray observations leaves other possibilities open, a parameterization of the event as a set of seven sequentially firing loops is presented that offers many satisfying explanations of the observations.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- October 1983
- DOI:
- 10.1086/161413
- Bibcode:
- 1983ApJ...273..783K
- Keywords:
-
- Gamma Rays;
- Pulsed Radiation;
- Solar Flares;
- Solar X-Rays;
- Radiant Flux Density;
- Solar Maximum Mission;
- Solar Spectrometers;
- Spectral Energy Distribution;
- Stellar Models;
- Solar Physics