NuSTAR Detection of X-Ray Heating Events in the Quiet Sun

Abstract

The explanation of the coronal heating problem potentially lies in the existence of nanoflares, numerous small-scale heating events occuring across the whole solar disk. In this paper, we present the first imaging spectroscopy X-ray observations of three quiet Sun flares during the NuSTAR solar campaigns on 2016 July 26 and 2017 March 21, concurrent with SDO/AIA observations. Two of the three events showed time lags of a few minutes between peak X-ray and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) emissions. Isothermal fits with rather low temperatures in the range 3.2-4.1 MK and emission measures of (0.6-15)×1044 cm-3 describe their spectra well, resulting in thermal energies in the range (2-6)×1026 ergs. NuSTAR spectra did not show any signs of a nonthermal or higher temperature component. However, since the estimated upper limits of (hidden) nonthermal energy are comparable to the thermal energy estimates, the lack of a nonthermal component in the observed spectra is not a constraining result. The estimated GOES classes from the fitted values of temperature and emission measure fall between 1/1000 and 1/100 A class level, making them 8 orders of magnitude fainter in soft X-ray flux than the largest solar flares.

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