Magnetic structure of solar flare regions producing hard X-ray pulsations
I.V. Zimovets, R. Wang, Y.D. Liu, C.C. Wang, S.A. Kuznetsov, I.N., Sharykin, A.B. Struminsky, V.M. Nakariakov

TL;DR
This study investigates the magnetic structures in solar flare regions with hard X-ray pulsations, finding that magnetic flux ropes and complex loop systems are key to understanding the energy release processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates the role of magnetic flux ropes and surrounding loop arcades in producing HXR pulsations, challenging simple flare loop models.
Findings
Magnetic flux ropes are present before each flare at the polarity inversion line.
HXR pulsations originate from different magnetic loops, not just a single flare loop.
Complex magnetic configurations are involved in energy release during flares.
Abstract
We present analysis of the magnetic field in seven solar flare regions accompanied by the pulsations of hard X-ray (HXR) emission. These flares were studied by Kuznetsov et al. (2016) (Paper~I), and chosen here because of the availability of the vector magnetograms for their parent active regions (ARs) obtained with the SDO/HMI data. In Paper~I, based on the observations only, it was suggested that a magnetic flux rope (MFR) might play an important role in the process of generation of the HXR pulsations. The goal of the present paper is to test this hypothesis by using the extrapolation of magnetic field with the non-linear force-free field (NLFFF) method. Having done this, we found that before each flare indeed there was an MFR elongated along and above a magnetic polarity inversion line (MPIL) on the photosphere. In two flare regions the sources of the HXR pulsations were located at…
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