84 research outputs found
MHD waves and instabilities in flowing solar structures in the framework of Hall magnetohydrodynamics
It is well established now that the solar atmosphere, from photosphere to the
corona and the solar wind is a highly structured medium. Satellite observations
have confirmed the presence of steady flows. Here, we investigate the parallel
propagation of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) surface waves travelling along an
ideal incompressible flowing plasma slab surrounded by flowing plasma
environment in the framework of the Hall magnetohydrodynamics. The propagation
properties of the waves are studied in a reference frame moving with the mass
flow outside the slab. In general, flows change the waves' phase velocities
compared to their magnitudes in a static MHD plasma slab and the Hall effect
limits the range of waves' propagation. On the other hand, when the relative
Alfvenic Mach number is negative, the flow extends the waves propagation range
beyond that limit (owing to the Hall effect) and can cause the triggering of
the Kelvin--Helmholtz instability whose onset begins at specific critical wave
numbers. It turns out that the interval of Alfvenic Mach numbers for which the
surface modes are unstable critically depends on the ratio between mass
densities outside and inside the flux tube.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures. This LaTeX file represents the final version of
the paper which will appear in the European Physical Journal D. The final
version contains a new (shorter) abstract and some minor improvements in the
tex
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability of kink waves in photospheric twisted flux tubes
We investigate conditions under which kink magnetohydrodynamic waves
propagating along photospheric uniformly twisted flux tubes with axial mass
flows become unstable as a consequence of the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. We
employed the dispersion relations of kink waves derived from the linearised
magnetohydrodynamic equations. We assumed real wave numbers and complex angular
wave frequencies, namely complex wave phase velocities. The dispersion
relations were solved numerically at fixed input parameters and several mass
flow velocities. We show that the stability of the waves depends upon four
parameters, the density contrast between the flux tube and its environment, the
ratio of the background magnetic fields in the two media, the twist of the
magnetic field lines inside the tube, and the value of the Alfven-Mach number
(the ratio of the jet velocity to Alfv\'en speed inside the flux tube). At
certain densities and magnetic field twists, an instability of the
Kelvin-Helmholtz type of kink (m = 1) mode can arise if the Alfven-Mach number
exceeds a critical value. The observed mass flows may trigger the
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability of the kink (m = 1) mode in weakly twisted
photospheric magnetic flux tubes at critical Alfven-Mach numbers lower that
those in untwisted tubes if the magnetic field twist lies in the range
0.36--0.4 and the flow speed exceeds a critical value. A weak external magnetic
field (with a ratio to the magnetic field inside the tube in the range
0.1--0.5) slightly increases that critical value.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1105.112
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability of twisted magnetic flux tubes in the solar wind
Solar wind plasma is supposed to be structured in magnetic flux tubes carried
from the solar surface. Tangential velocity discontinuity near the boundaries
of individual tubes may result in Kelvin-Helmholtz instability, which may
contribute into the solar wind turbulence. While the axial magnetic field may
stabilize the instability, a small twist in the magnetic field may allow to
sub-Alfvenic motions to be unstable. We aim to study the Kelvin-Helmholtz
instability of twisted magnetic flux tube in the solar wind with different
configurations of external magnetic field. We use magnetohydrodynamic equations
in the cylindrical geometry and derive the dispersion equations governing the
dynamics of twisted magnetic flux tube moving along its axis in the cases of
untwisted and twisted external fields. Then we solve the dispersion equations
analytically and numerically and found thresholds for Kelvin-Helmholtz
instability in both cases of external field. Both analytical and numerical
solutions show that the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is suppressed in the
twisted tube by external axial magnetic field for sub-Alfvenic motions.
However, even small twist in the external magnetic field allows the
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability to be developed for any sub-Alfvenic motions. The
unstable harmonics correspond to vortices with high azimuthal mode numbers,
which are carried by the flow. Twisted magnetic flux tubes can be unstable to
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability when they move with small speed relative to main
solar wind stream, then the Kelvin-Helmholtz vortices may significantly
contribute into the solar wind turbulence.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted in A&
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