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Recent observations from {em RHESSI} have revealed that the number of non-thermal electrons in the coronal part of a flaring loop can exceed the number of electrons required to explain the hard X-ray-emitting footpoints of the same flaring loop. Such sources cannot, therefore, be interpreted on the basis of the standard collisional transport model, in which electrons stream along the loop while losing their energy through collisions with the ambient plasma; additional physical processes, to either trap or scatter the energetic electrons, are required. Motivated by this and other observations that suggest that high energy electrons are confined to the coronal region of the source, we consider turbulent pitch angle scattering of fast electrons off low frequency magnetic fluctuations as a confinement mechanism, modeled as a spatial diffusion parallel to the mean magnetic field. In general, turbulent scattering leads to a reduction of the collisional stopping distance of non-thermal electrons along the loop and hence to an enhancement of the coronal HXR source relative to the footpoints. The variation of source size $L$ with electron energy $E$ becomes weaker than the quadratic behavior pertinent to collisional transport, with the slope of $L(E)$ depending directly on the mean free path $lambda$ again pitch angle scattering. Comparing the predictions of the model with observations, we find that $lambda sim$$(10^8-10^9)$ cm for $sim30$ keV, less than the length of a typical flaring loop and smaller than, or comparable to, the size of the electron acceleration region.
Energetic electrons with power-law spectrum are most commonly observed in astrophysics. This paper investigates electron cyclotron maser emission (ECME) from the power-law electrons, in which strong pitch-angle anisotropy is emphasized. The electron
A fundamental problem in astrophysics is the interaction between magnetic turbulence and charged particles. It is now possible to use emph{Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI)} observations of hard X-rays (HXR) emitted by electrons
X-radiation from energetic electrons is the prime diagnostic of flare-accelerated electrons. The observed X-ray flux (and polarization state) is fundamentally a convolution of the cross-section for the hard X-ray emission process(es) in question with
Pitch-angle scattering rates for cosmic-ray particles in magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations with imbalanced turbulence are calculated for fully evolving electromagnetic turbulence. We compare with theoretical predictions derived from the quasiline
We present the first results of a search for transient hard X-ray (HXR) emission in the quiet solar corona with the textit{Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array} (textit{NuSTAR}) satellite. While textit{NuSTAR} was designed as an astrophysics mission