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Impulsive phase of solar flares

1980 
The present understanding of the impulsive phase of a solar flare, characterized by short-duration bursts of impulsive hard X-ray, EUV, optical and radio emission indicating the release of energetic electrons is reviewed. Observations of the spectral distribution of impulsive hard X-ray bursts and of Type III and radio continuum bursts are presented and interpreted in terms of energetic electron distributions, and impulsive EUV, XUV, soft X-ray and optical observations, which provide a lower limit to total energy release during the impulsive phase, are discussed. The role of energetic electrons in exciting the hard X-ray, EUV and microwave emissions is considered, and thin-target, thick-target, partial-precipitation and thermal models of impulsive phase electron acceleration are evaluated in light of the observations. It is noted that available data do not allow discrimination between a thermal or a nonthermal electron distribution, on which depends the proportion of flare energy supplied by the energetic electrons, and that data favors models which permit at least partial electron precipitation. Future observational and theoretical work is indicated.
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