Abstract

Energetic electrons, with energies 10–100 keV, accelerated during the impulsive phase of solar flares, sometimes encounter increasing magnetic fields as they stream towards the chromosphere. A consequence of the conservation of their magnetic moment is that the electrons with large initial pitch angle will be reflected at different heights from the atmosphere. Energetic electrons reflected below the transition zone will lose most of their energy to collisions and will never return to the corona. Thus, electrons reflected above the transition zone form a loss-cone velocity distribution which can be unstable to Electron Cyclotron Maser (ECM). The interaction of quasi-perpendicular shocks with the ambient coronal plasma will form a ‘ring’ or ‘hollow beam’ velocity distribution upstream of the shock. ‘Ring’ velocity distributions are also unstable to the ECM instability. A review of the recent results on the theory of ECM will be presented. We will focus our discussion on the questions: (a) What are the characteristics of the linear growth rate of the ECM during solar flares? (b) How does the ECM saturate and what is its efficiency? (c) How does the ECM generated radiation modify the flare environment? Finally we will review the outstanding questions in the theory of ECM and we will relate the theoretical predictions to current observations.

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