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Hard X-ray (HXR) sources are frequently observed near the top of solar flare loops, and the emission is widely ascribed to bremsstrahlung. We here revisit an alternative scenario which stresses the importance of inverse Compton processes and the Kelvin- Helmholtz instability (KHI) proposed by Fang et al. (2016). This scenario adds a novel ingredient to the standard flare model, where evaporation flows from flare-impacted chromospheric foot-points interact with each other near the loop top and produce turbulence via KHI. The turbulence can act as a trapping region and as an efficient accelerator to provide energetic electrons, which scatter soft X-ray (SXR) photons to HXR photons via the inverse Compton mechanism. This paper focuses on the trigger of the KHI and the resulting turbulence in this new scenario. We perform a parameter survey to investigate the necessary ingredients to obtain KHI through interaction of chromospheric evaporation flows. When turbulence is produced in the loop apex, an index of -5/3 can be found in the spectra of velocity and magnetic field fluctuations. The KHI development and the generation of turbulence are controlled by the amount of energy deposited in the chromospheric foot-points and the time scale of its energy deposition, but typical values for M class flares show the KHI development routinely. Asymmetry of energy deposition determines the location where the turbulence is produced, and the synthesized SXR light curve shows a clear periodic signal related to the sloshing motion of the vortex pattern created by the KHI.
In this paper we investigate whether Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH), equipped with artificial conductivity, is able to capture the physics of density/energy discontinuities in the case of the so-called shearing layers test, a test for examinin
Using data obtained by the high resolution CRisp Imaging SpectroPolarimeter instrument on the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope, we investigate the dynamics and stability of quiet-Sun chromospheric jets observed at disk center. Small-scale features, such a
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The Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability is commonly found in many astrophysical, laboratory, and space plasmas. It could mix plasma components of different properties and convert dynamic fluid energy from large scale structure to smaller ones. In this
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