Hinode/SOT Observations of Flare Ribbons

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==ntroduction==
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[http://sprg.ssl.berkeley.edu/~tohban/nuggets/?page=article&article_id=49 Link out to original article]
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The most recent and most powerful solar observatory in space - Hinode - has recently been launched by JAXA on its last M-V (Mu-5) rocket. Remarkably, Hinode carries the very first high-resolution telescope into space to study the Sun at optical wavelengths, i.e. in the photosphere and chromosphere. This telescope,SOT, is totally free of the bane of all astronomers viewing the sky through the atmosphere, seeing.
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[[Category:Nugget needs text]]
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Figure 2: Artist's conception of how Solar-B (now called Hinode, japanese for "sunrise") might look in orbit. Now that it's launched, of course, nobody knows what it looks like!
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==Solar flares with Hinode?==
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Launched in October 2006, Hinode is initially observing during solar minimum. But it is well-equipped to observe solar flares with the combination of SOT and the X-ray Telescope (XRT), a full-disk X-ray telescope which is a follow-on to the earlier ISAS solar observatory Yohkoh SXT instrument. Thus it is a new departure rather than a successor to Yohkoh, the earlier ISAS solar observatory. Hinode's brilliant new observations of the photosphere and lower solar atmosphere (in particular) promise to tell us many important things about the processes that lead to and follow from flares. In particular the optical telescope, SOT, can observe in the Fraunhofer H-line of calcium, a strong chromospheric line.
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The unexpected did happen, as though on schedule, when in December 2006 the Sun produced a last gasp (probably) of major activity before the true minimum. This Nugget describes observations of an X-class flare of December 13, 2006, which was also observed by RHESSI - in principle, an ideal complementarity.
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Figure 2: Four frames from the Hinode H-line observations of the December 13, 2006 "two ribbon" flare. Note how the flare starts (upper left) on a compact scale, and then spreads (lower panels) across the umbra of the large sunspot.
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The figure below shows the time series of the flare development, including hard X-rays (from RHESSI). The Hinode H line has a smooth time profile, suggesting a "thermal" excitation rather than a nonthermal one, as represented by the RHESSI hard X-rays. This is immediately interesting because of the small number of flare observations in this line.
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Figure 3: Top panel, light curves for the HinodeH-line and the RHESSI hard X-rays, establishing the chromospheric credentials of the H-line. Bottom panel, a detail of the RHESSI spectrogram representaion of the hard X-ray spectra. Note the many late hard X-ray bursts.
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==What did RHESSI see, and what can we conclude?==
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With regards to RHESSI, we have apparently excellent observations (see Figure 3) but sadly, it turns out, they are only spectroscopic. This flare, among all flares, chose to occur just at the center of RHESSI's rotation (see this nugget for some further explanation). For technical reasons this means that imaging is very difficult. The Hinode chromospheric (H-line) and photospheric (G-band) images show remarkbly fine structures, and we have thereby lost a chance to make a detailed comparison at the highest resolution. However, analysis of this great event is just beginning, and we can hope for more sophisticated analyses than has been reported here.
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'''Biographical note''': Tom Berger is a research scientist at LMSAL (Palo Alto).
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[[Category:Nugget needs figures]][[Category:Nugget need cleaning]]

Latest revision as of 14:38, 24 August 2018


Nugget
Number: 49
1st Author: Tom Berger
2nd Author:
Published: 16 January 2007
Next Nugget: Solar X-rays from axions
Previous Nugget: Hard X-ray Emission along H-alpha Ribbons
List all



ntroduction

The most recent and most powerful solar observatory in space - Hinode - has recently been launched by JAXA on its last M-V (Mu-5) rocket. Remarkably, Hinode carries the very first high-resolution telescope into space to study the Sun at optical wavelengths, i.e. in the photosphere and chromosphere. This telescope,SOT, is totally free of the bane of all astronomers viewing the sky through the atmosphere, seeing.


Figure 2: Artist's conception of how Solar-B (now called Hinode, japanese for "sunrise") might look in orbit. Now that it's launched, of course, nobody knows what it looks like!

Solar flares with Hinode?

Launched in October 2006, Hinode is initially observing during solar minimum. But it is well-equipped to observe solar flares with the combination of SOT and the X-ray Telescope (XRT), a full-disk X-ray telescope which is a follow-on to the earlier ISAS solar observatory Yohkoh SXT instrument. Thus it is a new departure rather than a successor to Yohkoh, the earlier ISAS solar observatory. Hinode's brilliant new observations of the photosphere and lower solar atmosphere (in particular) promise to tell us many important things about the processes that lead to and follow from flares. In particular the optical telescope, SOT, can observe in the Fraunhofer H-line of calcium, a strong chromospheric line.

The unexpected did happen, as though on schedule, when in December 2006 the Sun produced a last gasp (probably) of major activity before the true minimum. This Nugget describes observations of an X-class flare of December 13, 2006, which was also observed by RHESSI - in principle, an ideal complementarity.


Figure 2: Four frames from the Hinode H-line observations of the December 13, 2006 "two ribbon" flare. Note how the flare starts (upper left) on a compact scale, and then spreads (lower panels) across the umbra of the large sunspot. The figure below shows the time series of the flare development, including hard X-rays (from RHESSI). The Hinode H line has a smooth time profile, suggesting a "thermal" excitation rather than a nonthermal one, as represented by the RHESSI hard X-rays. This is immediately interesting because of the small number of flare observations in this line.


Figure 3: Top panel, light curves for the HinodeH-line and the RHESSI hard X-rays, establishing the chromospheric credentials of the H-line. Bottom panel, a detail of the RHESSI spectrogram representaion of the hard X-ray spectra. Note the many late hard X-ray bursts.

What did RHESSI see, and what can we conclude?

With regards to RHESSI, we have apparently excellent observations (see Figure 3) but sadly, it turns out, they are only spectroscopic. This flare, among all flares, chose to occur just at the center of RHESSI's rotation (see this nugget for some further explanation). For technical reasons this means that imaging is very difficult. The Hinode chromospheric (H-line) and photospheric (G-band) images show remarkbly fine structures, and we have thereby lost a chance to make a detailed comparison at the highest resolution. However, analysis of this great event is just beginning, and we can hope for more sophisticated analyses than has been reported here.

Biographical note: Tom Berger is a research scientist at LMSAL (Palo Alto).

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