Thermal Models for Solar Hard X-ray Bursts

Thermal models for hard X-ray bursts consisting of a one-dimensional flux tube whose central electrons are heated to about 400 million K are examined. It is found that the evolution of a thermal X-ray source is a sensitive function of the electron-ion thermal coupling and the state of the plasma into which the source expands. When this coupling is weak, the heated electrons separate into a region of high temperature of about 400 million K and a region of lower temperature of about 100 million K, a process which leads to a power-law X-ray spectrum. In the case of strong coupling there is only one dominant temperature, about 200 million K, and the X-ray spectrum resembles a true thermal spectrum.