TL;DR
This study investigates the stability of two-fluid partially-ionised slow-mode shock fronts, revealing that neutral species can stabilize the shock front under certain coupling conditions, unlike pure MHD shocks.
Contribution
It provides the first numerical analysis of two-fluid partially-ionised shock front stability, deriving conditions and a wavelength range for stability in such systems.
Findings
Neutral species can stabilize shock fronts in partially-ionised media.
Unstable shock fronts occur at very weak or very strong coupling.
Derived wavelength stability range for umbral flashes is 0.6 to 56 km.
Abstract
A magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) shock front can be unstable to the corrugation instability, which causes a perturbed shock front to become increasingly corrugated with time. An ideal MHD parallel shock (where the velocity and magnetic fields are aligned) is unconditionally unstable to the corrugation instability, whereas the ideal hydrodynamic (HD) counterpart is unconditionally stable. For a partially ionised medium (for example the solar chromosphere), both hydrodynamic and magnetohydrodynamic species coexist and the stability of the system has not been studied. In this paper, we perform numerical simulations of the corrugation instability in two-fluid partially-ionised shock fronts to investigate the stability conditions, and compare the results to HD and MHD simulations. Our simulations consist of an initially steady 2D parallel shock encountering a localised upstream density…
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