The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

A Modeling Investigation for Solar Flare X-Ray Stereoscopy with Solar Orbiter/STIX and Earth-orbiting Missions

  • Natasha L. S. Jeffrey,
  • Säm Krucker,
  • Morgan Stores,
  • Eduard P. Kontar,
  • Pascal Saint-Hilaire,
  • Andrea F. Battaglia,
  • Laura Hayes,
  • Hannah Collier,
  • Astrid Veronig,
  • Yang Su,
  • Srikar Paavan Tadepalli,
  • Fanxiaoyu Xia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad236f
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 964, no. 2
p. 145

Abstract

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The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) on board Solar Orbiter (SolO) provides a unique opportunity to systematically perform stereoscopic X-ray observations of solar flares with current and upcoming X-ray missions at Earth. These observations will produce the first reliable measurements of hard X-ray (HXR) directivity in decades, providing a new diagnostic of the flare-accelerated electron angular distribution and helping to constrain the processes that accelerate electrons in flares. However, such observations must be compared to modeling, taking into account electron and X-ray transport effects and realistic plasma conditions, all of which can change the properties of the measured HXR directivity. Here, we show how HXR directivity, defined as the ratio of X-ray spectra at different spacecraft viewing angles, varies with different electron and flare properties (e.g., electron angular distribution, highest-energy electrons, and magnetic configuration), and how modeling can be used to extract these typically unknown properties from the data. Finally, we present a preliminary HXR directivity analysis of two flares, observed by the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor and SolO/STIX, demonstrating the feasibility and challenges associated with such observations, and how HXR directivity can be extracted by comparison with the modeling presented here.

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