Introduction
RHESSI has been operating for over 5 years now and has seen quite a
number of flares: the official flare list (thanks to Jim McTiernan) has
nearly 11,000 flare from March 2002 to March 2007. Of these, 7,839 are
microflares, that is low C- Class to sub A-Class flares, with the name
originally denoting events with energies "micro" or a millionth, of a larger
flare. RHESSI is especially good at observing these wee events due to its
automated shutters. During large flares these shutters are placed in front
of the detectors protecting them from the large fluxes of low energy
thermal photons but during quieter times they can be moved out,
allowing the full sensitivity of RHESSI's detectors to be revealed.
The official flare list however looks for events in 12-25 keV, an
energy range in which many microflares rarely get above background. So
we developed a new algorithm that is optimised to search for microflares
in 6-12 keV during shutter out times. We find 24,799 events, over 3 times
the number from the official flare list.
With so many events, there are many nuggets to mine but in order
to present a concise nugget we will concentrate on when and
where these RHESSI microflares occur.
How often?
The first question to answer is how often do these events occur.
Figure 1:
The microflaring rate over the past 5 years of observations. The
histogram has been corrected for the times RHESSI was not observing or
had the shutter in, hence the rate per live day. The red line and righthand
axis indicate the number of sunspots (via NOAA). We can
clearly see that the microflaring rate is closely tied to solar activity, with
the number of microflares dropping as we approach solar minimum in
early 2007.
In Figure 1, we see that the histogram of the microflaring rate
steadily decreases from solar maximum to minimum: in 2002 we could
expect over 70 microflares per day, but by solar minimum in 2007 be get
under 10 a day on average. Also shown in Figure 1 is the time profile of
sunspot number over the same time period. Clearly the microflaring rate
is tied to solar activity, which is unsurprising. Although over the same
period the same is not true for the largest flares (see a previous
nugget). Note the discrepancy between the microflaring rate and the
sunspot number during the first 6 months is, we believe, due to a
combination of using a different strategy as to when the shutters came in
and the large number of C,M and X-class flares hiding smaller events.
Where on the solar disk?
The next question is to ask where on the solar disk these events occur.
Figure 2: The longitude and latitude positions
of all the microflares with trusted positions, over 24,000 events.
Flare positions (as seen in Figure 2) reinforce the sense that these
microflares are associated with active regions. Their latitudes are
clustered in the active region band (where active regions usually appear)
and in the longitude plot we can see the distinct straight lines where
active regions are traced out by their microflares as the move across the
disk. A small number events have positions not associated with active
regions but on closer inspection we do not trust the position information
for these events, as the RHESSI's roll solution is not correct. So all the
6-12 keV events RHESSI observes are active region phenomena.
Imaging using visibilities
Of course with RHESSI we can do considerably more than just the
times and positions of these events. We can for instance, investigate the
image of the thermal emission, which we take to be 4-8 keV in these
events. The resulting loop like structures are important as they give us an
estimate of the emitting thermal volume and hence thermal energy.
Figure 3: (click on the above image for the
animated version or a quicktime movie is also available here).
Images, using MEM_NJIT on the 4-8 keV visibilities, for the most prolific
microflaring active region RHESSI observed, AR10536. The colour scale
changes from image to image, so those with the brighter backgrounds are
smaller events. The solid circle indicates the size of the sunspot group
and the time profile below the image shows the GOES 1-8A light curve for
time +/- 12 hours of the microflare. Note that not all the flares as they
are either from other active regions or occurred during periods when
RHESSI was not observing with shutters out.
In order to quickly investigate the spatial information about so many
event we use visibilities (as detailed in a
previous nugget). Visibilities allow the spatial structure to be quickly
recovered as they make use of the data in the form of a compact set of
calibrated data, instead of the full RHESSI un-calibrated time profile.
Shown in Figure 3 are the resulting 4-8 keV images using the MEM_NJIT
algorithm ( Schmahl et
al. 2007, Sol. Phys. 33), for 16 seconds about the peak time in 6-12
keV for each microflare we associated with active region AR10536. We
see that some microflares are repeat flaring events from the same loop
structure. Others are occurring at different locations throughout the
active region, either compact points or large loops reaching out from the
active region, with one leg in the sunspot group.
A wealth of information
In this nugget we have shown that RHESSI microflares are closely
related to solar activity and are associated with active regions. But this is
just one brief aspect of these events.
We have a wealth of information about these events with Forward Fitting
shapes to the visibilities allowing us to investigate the spatial scales of
the emission and fitting the spectrum of these events allows us to obtain
the temperature, emission measure as well as characteristics of the
non-thermal component. Combining all this information allows us to
investigate the distributions of both the thermal and non-thermal
energies in these events and the implications this has for small flare and
coronal heating. Something that will be the topic of a future nugget......
Biographical note:
Iain Hannah and Steven Christe are both members of the RHESSI team at
Space Science Lab, UC Berkeley.