First Hard X-Ray Imaging Results by Solar Orbiter STIX

Author:

Massa PaoloORCID,Battaglia Andrea F.,Volpara Anna,Collier Hannah,Hurford Gordon J.,Kuhar Matej,Perracchione Emma,Garbarino Sara,Massone Anna Maria,Benvenuto Federico,Schuller Frederic,Warmuth Alexander,Dickson Ewan C. M.,Xiao Hualin,Maloney Shane A.,Ryan Daniel F.,Piana Michele,Krucker Säm

Abstract

AbstractThe Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) is one of six remote sensing instruments on-board Solar Orbiter. The telescope applies an indirect imaging technique that uses the measurement of 30 visibilities, i.e., angular Fourier components of the solar flare X-ray source. Hence, the imaging problem for STIX consists of the Fourier inversion of the data measured by the instrument. In this work, we show that the visibility amplitude and phase calibration of 24 out of 30 STIX sub-collimators has reached a satisfactory level for scientific data exploitation and that a set of imaging methods is able to provide the first hard X-ray images of solar flares from Solar Orbiter. Four visibility-based image reconstruction methods and one count-based are applied to calibrated STIX observations of six events with GOES class between C4 and M4 that occurred in May 2021. The resulting reconstructions are compared to those provided by an optimization algorithm used for fitting the amplitudes of STIX visibilities. We show that the five imaging methods produce results morphologically consistent with the ones provided by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly on board the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO/AIA) in UV wavelengths. The $\chi ^{2}$ χ 2 values and the parameters of the reconstructed sources are comparable between methods, thus confirming their robustness.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

ASI-INAF

Austrian Science Fund

Università degli Studi di Genova

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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