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On the Origin of Three Seismic Sources in the Proton-Rich Flare of 2003 October 28.

No / The three seismic sources, S1, S2, and S3, detected from MDI Dopplergrams using the time-distance (TD) diagram technique are presented with the locations, areas, and vertical and horizontal velocities of the visible wave displacements. Within the data cube of 120 Mm, the horizontal velocities and the wave propagation times vary slightly from source to source. The momenta and start times measured from the TD diagrams in sources S1-S3 are compared with those delivered to the photosphere by different kinds of high-energy particles with the parameters deduced from hard X-ray and ¿-ray emission, as well as by the hydrodynamic shocks caused by these particles. The energetic protons (power laws combined with quasi-thermal ones, or jets) are shown to deliver momentum high enough and to form the hydrodynamic shocks deep enough in a flaring atmosphere to allow them to be delivered to the photosphere through much shorter distances and times. Then the seismic waves observed in the sources S2 and S3 can be explained by the momenta produced by hydrodynamic shocks, which are caused by mixed proton beams and jets occurring nearly simultaneously with the third burst of hard X-ray and ¿-ray emission in the loops with footpoints in the locations of these sources. The seismic wave in source S1, delayed by 4 and 2 minutes from the first and second hard X-ray bursts, respectively, is likely to be associated with a hydrodynamic shock occurring in this loop from precipitation of a very powerful and hard electron beam with higher energy cutoff mixed with quasi-thermal protons generated by either of these two bursts.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BRADFORD/oai:bradscholars.brad.ac.uk:10454/3939
Date January 2007
CreatorsZharkova, Valentina V., Zharkov, Sergei I.
Source SetsBradford Scholars
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeArticle, No full-text available in the repository

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