Abstract
We have studied the spectacular 1991 June X-class flares using gamma-ray
data from the
Charged Particle Detectors (CPDs) of the Burst and Transient Source
Experiment (BATSE) on
the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) and 80 GHz millimeter data from
Nobeyama,
Japan.
The CPDs were the only CGRO instrument that did not saturate
during the extremely
intense 1991 June 4 flare. We have shown that for this flare the CPDs
respond to MeV photons,
most of which are due to bremsstrahlung produced by relativistic
electrons at the Sun. We have
further shown that the gamma-ray and millimeter observations agree
numerically if the 80 GHz
radiation is gyrosynchrotron radiation produced by trapped electrons and
the gamma rays are
thick-target bremsstrahlung due to electrons precipitating out of the
trap. The requirement that
the trapping time obtained from the numerical comparison be consistent
with the observed time
profiles implies a magnetic field between about 200 and 300 G and an
electron spectral index
between about 3 to 5. By comparing the CPD observations with both the 80
GHz data and nuclear
line data from the Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope (EGRET) and
the Oriented
Scintillation Spectroscopy Experiment (OSSE) on CGRO for the flares of
June 4, 6, 9, and 11, we
found that the ratio of the CPD counts to both the millimeter flux
densities and the nuclear line
fluences decreases with decreasing flare heliocentric angle. All of
these flares were produced in
the same active region. We interpreted this result in terms of a loop
model in which the
gyrosynchrotron emission is produced in the coronal portion of the loop
where the electrons are
kept isotropic by pitch angle scattering due to plasma turbulence, while
the bremsstrahlung is
produced by precipitating electrons that interact anisotropically. We
found that the trapping time in
the coronal portion is time dependent, reaching a minimum of about 10 s
at the peak of the CPD
count rate. We suggested the damping of the turbulence as a possible
reason for the variation of
the trapping time. turbulence as a possible reason for the variation of
the trapping time.