Kelvin--Helmholtz instability in an active region jet observed with Hinode
I. Zhelyazkov, R. Chandra, A. K. Srivastava

TL;DR
This study investigates Kelvin-Helmholtz instability in an EUV solar jet observed by Hinode, modeling the jet as a magnetic flux tube and analyzing the conditions under which various MHD wave modes become unstable.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis of KH instability thresholds in solar EUV jets using MHD modeling and compares criteria for predicting instability onset.
Findings
Unstable MHD modes can develop at flow velocities of 112-114.8 km/s.
All stable modes are pure surface waves, while unstable kink mode becomes leaky.
In incompressible media, all unstable modes are non-leaky surface waves.
Abstract
Over past ten years a variety of jet-like phenomena were detected in the solar atmosphere, including plasma ejections over a range of coronal temperatures being observed as extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and X-ray jets. We study the possibility for the development of Kelvin--Helmholtz (KH) instability of transverse magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves traveling along an EUV jet situated on the west side of NOAA AR 10938 and observed by three instruments on board Hinode on 2007 January 15/16 (Chifor et al., Astron. Astrophys.481, L57 (2008)). The jet was observed around LogT_e = 6.2 with up-flow velocities exceeded 150 km/s. Using Fe XII lambda186 and lambda195 line ratios, the measured densities were found to be above LogN_e = 11. We have modeled that EUV jet as a vertically moving magnetic flux tube (untwisted and weakly twisted) and have studied the propagation characteristics of the kink (m =…
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