4.6 Article

THE PRODUCTION OF LOW-ENERGY NEUTRONS IN SOLAR FLARES AND THE IMPORTANCE OF THEIR DETECTION IN THE INNER HELIOSPHERE

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 202, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0067-0049/202/1/3

Keywords

interplanetary medium; Sun: chromosphere; Sun: flares; Sun: particle emission; Sun: X-rays, gamma rays

Funding

  1. NASA [NNH09AM55I]
  2. Office of Naval Research
  3. Israeli Science Foundation
  4. Directorate For Geosciences
  5. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1156092] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Neutron detectors on spacecraft in the inner heliosphere can observe the low-energy (<30 MeV) solar-flare neutrons that are not easily observable at Earth because they are lost to decay during transit. We present calculations of low-energy neutron production using a computer code incorporating updated neutron-production cross sections for the proton and alpha-particle reactions with heavier elements at all ion energies, especially at low energies (E-ion < 10 MeV nucleon(-1)) most important for producing low-energy neutrons from these reactions. We calculate escaping-neutron spectra and neutron-capture line yields from ions propagating in a magnetic loop with various kinetic-energy spectra. This study provides the basis for planning inner-heliospheric missions having a low-energy neutron detector. The MESSENGER spacecraft orbiting Mercury has such a detector. We conclude that a full understanding of ion acceleration, transport, and interaction at the Sun requires observation of both neutrons and gamma rays with detectors of comparable sensitivity. We find that the neutron-capture line fluence at 1 AU is comparable to the 1-10 MeV neutron fluence at 0.5 AU, and therefore as effective for revealing low-energy ion acceleration. However, as the distance from the Sun to the neutron detector decreases, the tremendous increase of the low-energy neutron flux allows exploration of ion acceleration in weak flares not previously observable and may reveal acceleration at other sites not previously detected where low-energy neutrons could be the only high-energy signature of ion acceleration. Also, a measurement of the low-energy neutron spectrum will provide important information about the accelerated-ion spectrum that is not available from the capture line fluence measurement alone.

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