TY - JOUR AU - Pandey, B P AB - Abstract In the Hall magnetohydrodynamics, the onset condition of the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability is solely determined by the Hall effect and is independent of the nature of shear flows. In addition, the physical mechanism behind the super- and sub-Alfvénic flows becoming unstable is quite different: the high-frequency right circularly polarized whistler becomes unstable in the super-Alfvénic flows whereas low-frequency, left circularly polarized ion-cyclotron wave becomes unstable in the presence of sub-Alfvénic shear flows. The growth rate of the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability in the super-Alfvénic case is higher than the corresponding ideal magnetohydrodynamic rate. In the sub-Alfvénic case, the Hall effect opens up a new, hitherto inaccessible (to the magnetohydrodynamics) channel through which the partially or fully ionized fluid can become Kelvin–Helmholtz unstable. The instability growth rate in this case is smaller than the super-Alfvénic case owing to the smaller free shear energy content of the flow. When the Hall term is somewhat smaller than the advection term in the induction equation, the Hall effect is also responsible for the appearance of a new overstable mode whose growth rate is smaller than the purely growing Kelvin–Helmholtz mode. On the other hand, when the Hall diffusion dominates the advection term, the growth rate of the instability depends only on the Alfvén –Mach number and is independent of the Hall diffusion coefficient. Further, the growth rate in this case linearly increases with the Alfvén frequency with smaller slope for sub-Alfvénic flows. instabilities, MHD, waves, Sun: atmosphere, Earth, protoplanetary discs 1 INTRODUCTION The Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) instability is a macroscopic instability that grows at the boundary of the velocity shear layer in the fluid. Onset of the KH instability in an ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) fluid depends on an interplay between the shear flow stress and the magnetic tension force. In the presence of magnetic field when the shear flow speed is larger than the Alfvén speed, i.e. when the flow is super-Alfvénic, the medium becomes KH unstable. The instability can be completely quenched if the flow is sub-Alfvénic , i.e. when the flow speed is smaller than the Alfvén speed. A typical example where KH instability may occur is when the fluid flows at two different velocities parallel to the surface of discontinuity. If the shear flow can overcome the surface tension, or the magnetic tension force, the fluid becomes unstable (Chandrasekhar 1961). Given the prevalence of shear flows in the geo, space, and astrophysical environment, it is not surprising that the KH instability is invoked as an efficient mechanism for the transport of momentum and energy across the shear layer. For example, KH instability is one of the most important mechanism for the plasma transport across Earth’s magnetosphere (Miura 1984, 1987; Fujimoto & Terasawa 1991). The observation of the vortices at the surface of the coronal mass ejecta hints at the likely presence of KH instability at the Sun (Foullon et al. 2011). Recent observations of the quiescent prominences in the solar atmosphere suggest that the presence of turbulent flows may have been caused by the KH instability (Martínez-Gómez, Soler & Terradas 2015). The KH eddies may drive turbulence and heat ambient plasma in the solar atmosphere (Kuridze et al. 2015; Murawski et al. 2016). Far away (≳100 au) from the Sun, when the hot solar wind meets the cold interstellar medium, the boundary layer between them may become KH unstable (Dasgupta et al. 2011). Shear instabilities in the dust layer of the solar nebula may inhibit the formation of planetisimals (Sekiya 1998; Sekiya & Ishitsu 2001; Michikoshi & Inutsuka 2006; Hasegawa & Toru 2014). It is quite plausible that the KH instability is responsible for the narrower line profiles in the ionized spices in molecular clouds (Watson et al. 2004). Therefore, from the wind-driven parched plains of the Earth to the vast expanse of the interstellar medium, KH instability plays an important role in driving the efficient turbulent mixing of the mass and momentum in the medium. The onset condition of the KH instability in a magnetized ideal fluid is determined by the Alfvén –Mach number, defined as   \begin{equation} M{_{\rm A}} = \left(\frac{v}{v_{\rm A}}\right), \end{equation} (1)where v = |v| is the shear-flow speed and $$v_{\rm A}= B/\sqrt{4\,\pi \,\rho }$$ is the Alfvén speed with B and ρ as the magnetic field and the mass density of the fluid, respectively. In the presence of a magnetic field, if the force due to the shear flow stress is larger than the magnetic tension force, i.e. when the flow is super-Alfvénic (MA > 1), the fluid becomes unstable. Opposite is the case when the magnetic tension force dominates the shear flow stress. These conclusions are valid of course in the absence of any additional source of free energy. However, if the magnetized fluid has an additional source of free energy such as the flow aligned uniform current (manifested as the twist in the flow aligned magnetic field) (Zaqarashvili et al. 2010, 2014; Zaqarashvili, Zhelyazkov & Ofman 2015), or, in planar jets (Singh & Talwar 1993), the sub-Alfvénic ideal MHD flows may also become KH unstable. In the absence of any such additional free energy source however, only super-Alfvénic flows are unstable in the single fluid ideal MHD framework (Chandrasekhar 1961). Note that in the ideal MHD framework, the bulk fluid is magnetized, and thus the fluid as a whole experiences the magnetic tension force. However in the Hall MHD, since the ion cyclotron frequency is much less than the dynamical frequency of interest (which in a partially ionized plasma is the neutral-ion collision frequency; Pandey & Wardle 2006, 2008), the ions are very weakly magnetized and thus are incapable of directly experiencing the magnetic tension force. It is the magnetized electrons that experience the magnetic force, and thus the role of magnetic tension force in mitigating the instability is not guaranteed in the presence of Hall effect. For the MHD description to be valid, the wavelength of fluctuations must be much larger than the Hall scale (Pandey & Wardle 2008), a constraint not always satisfied in the geo and astrophysical environment. For example, the observations of the Earth’s magnetopause boundary suggest that the Hall scale is comparable to the thickness of the boundary layer (Berchem & Russel 1982; Mozer, Bale & Phan 2002). The origin of the whistler waves in the Earth’ś lower ionosphere is due to the Hall effect (Stenzel 1999; Aburjania et al. 2005; Pandey 2016). The Hall diffusion is important in the large part of the solar atmosphere (Martínez-Sykora, De Pontieu & Hansteen 2012; Martinez et al. 2015; Pandey & Wardle 2012). In the protoplanetary discs, depending on the magnetic field strength, Hall diffusion could be important near the planet forming mid-plane region of the disc (Wardle 2007). The Hall effect qualitatively changes the behaviour of the magnetic field in the molecular clouds (Wardle 2004). Clearly, the Hall diffusion of the magnetic field could be crucial to the KH instability-driven turbulence in diverse physical settings.1 The KH instability in the framework of Hall MHD for super-Alfvénic flows has been studied in the past both analytically (Talwar & Kalra 1965; Sen & Chou 1968) (hereafter TK65, SC68) and numerically (Fujimoto & Terasawa 1991; Chacón, Knoll & Finn 2003; Jones & Downes 2011, 2012; Henri et al. 2013). The early analytical results suggested that in an incompressible flow, Hall effect not only causes faster growth of the instability in super-Alfvénic flows but even marginal (MA = 1) state becomes unstable. However, these early studies have been confined only to the super-Alfvénic or marginal flows and do not consider the sub-Alfvénic case. The numerical investigation of the 2D incompressible parallel field-flow by Chacón et al. (2003) in agreement with the TK65 and SC68 finds that the KH instability is destabilized by the Hall effect. Recent simulation results of Henri et al. (2013) also give slightly larger (than the ideal MHD) growth rate in the Hall MHD. However, the numerical simulations of the compressible super-Alfvénic (MA = 2.5–5) trans-sonic (flow speed of the order of or larger than the sound speed) flows find that the growth rate of the KH instability is unaffected by the Hall effect (Fujimoto & Terasawa 1991). The investigation of the KH instability in the partially ionized medium for the highly super-Alfvénic (MA = 10) trans-sonic flows also gives similar results (Jones & Downes 2011, 2012). Clearly, the numerical investigation of the compressible and incompressible magnetized fluid gives different results. This is not surprising given that in a compressible fluid part of the free shear flow energy goes into the compression of the fluid, thus slightly reducing the growth rate of the KH instability (Karimi & Girimaji 2016). To summarize, the numerical investigation of the KH instability for both the compressible and incompressible flows in the framework of Hall MHD has been limited to the marginal or super-Alfvénic flows. In this work, we investigate the KH instability in the Hall MHD framework. Although the past investigations of the KH instability have been carried out for the fully ionized plasma, the same can be easily generalized to the partially ionized plasmas. Thus, we shall use the basic set of non-ideal MHD equations for the partially ionized plasma given by Pandey & Wardle (2006, 2008). The advantage of such a formulation is that the results of the fully and weakly ionized plasmas constitute the subset of the general results and thus have wider applicability, ranging from the protoplanetary discs to the Earth’s ionosphere. We briefly discuss the basic set of equations and boundary condition in Section 2. The detailed discussion of the boundary condition is given elsewhere (Rosenau, Tataronis & Conn 1979). We discuss the dispersion relation in Section 3. Since the Hall effect depends on the sign of the magnetic field, we show that the KH instability growth rate is mirror symmetric with respect to such a sign change. The application of the result with a brief summary is given in Section 4. 2 BASIC MODEL The basic set of non-ideal MHD equations that describe the partially ionized medium is (Pandey & Wardle 2006, 2008)  \begin{equation} \frac{\partial \rho }{\partial t}+ \nabla \cdot \left(\rho \,{{\bf v}}\right) = 0. \end{equation} (2)  \begin{equation} \rho \,\frac{{\rm d}{{\bf v}}}{{\rm d}t}= - \nabla \,P + \frac{\boldsymbol {J} {\times }{{\bf B}}}{c}. \end{equation} (3)  \begin{equation} \frac{\partial {{\bf B}}}{\partial t}= {\nabla {\times }}\left[ \left({{\bf v}}+ {{\bf v}}_B\right) {\times }{{\bf B}}- \frac{4\,\pi \,\eta _O}{c}\,\boldsymbol {J_\parallel }\right]. \end{equation} (4)  \begin{equation} \boldsymbol {J}= \frac{c}{4\,\pi }{\nabla \, {\times }}\,{{\bf B}}. \end{equation} (5)Here,   \begin{equation} \boldsymbol {v}_B= \eta _P\,\frac{\left(\nabla {\times }{{\bf B}}\right)_{\perp } {\times }\hat{{{\bf B}}}}{B} - \eta _{\rm H}\,\frac{\left(\nabla {\times }{{\bf B}}\right)_{\perp }}{B}, \end{equation} (6)is the magnetic diffusion velocity and ηP = ηO + ηA is the Pedersen diffusivity. The parallel and perpendicular components of the current refer to its orientation with respect to the background magnetic field. The Ohm (ηO), ambipolar (ηA), and Hall (ηH) diffusivities are   \begin{equation} \eta _O = \frac{c^2}{4\,\pi \sigma }\ , \eta _{\rm A} = \frac{D^2\,B^2}{4\,\pi \,\rho _i\,\nu _{in}}, \eta {_{\rm H}} = \frac{c\,B}{4\,\pi \,e\,n_e}. \end{equation} (7)Here,   \begin{equation} \sigma = \frac{c\,e\,n_e}{B}\, \left[\frac{\omega _{ce}}{\nu _{e}} + \frac{\omega _{ci}}{\nu _{i}} \right] \end{equation} (8)is the parallel conductivity, ωcj = e B/mj c is particle’s cyclotron frequency, where e , B , mj , and c denote the charge, magnetic field, mass, and speed of light, respectively, and D = ρn/ρ is the ratio of the neutral and bulk mass densities. For the electrons νe = νen and for the ions νi ≡ νin. Although νee , νei , νii,  and , νie can become comparable to νen for example in the solar atmosphere (Pandey, Vranjes & Krishan 2008; Pandey & Wardle 2013), it is the neutral-plasma collision that gives rise to the ambipolar and Hall diffusion in the partially ionized medium. The collisions between the like particles νee,  νii to the leading order do not cause any diffusion. The electron–ion collision contributes to the Ohm diffusion. Defining plasma Hall parameter βj as   \begin{equation} \beta _j = \frac{\omega _{cj}}{\nu _{jn}}, \end{equation} (9)and the Hall frequency   \begin{equation} \omega {_{\rm H}} = \frac{\rho _i}{\rho }\,\omega _{ci} \approx X_e\,\omega _{ci}, \end{equation} (10)above diffsivities, equation (7), can be written in the compact form (Pandey & Wardle 2008)   \begin{equation} \eta {_{\rm H}} = \left(\frac{v{_{\rm A}}^2}{\omega {_{\rm H}}}\right), \eta {_{\rm A}} = D\,\left(\frac{v{_{\rm A}}^2}{\nu _{ni}}\right), \mbox{and}, \eta _O = \beta _e^{-1}\,\eta {_{\rm H}}. \end{equation} (11)Here, ρi = mi ni is the ion mass density, and Xe = ne/nn is the ratio of the electron (ne) and neutral (nn) number densities and is a measure of the fractional ionization of the medium. The collision frequency νni = ρi νin/ρn. The relative strength of various non-ideal MHD effect is encapsulated in the plasma Hall parameter βj. As is transparent from equation (11), Hall dominates ambipolar when βi ≪ 1 implying that the relative ion-neutral drift is unimportant in comparison to the electron–ion drift. Similarly, when the electrons are frozen in the partially ionized fluid, i.e. βe ≫ 1, compared to the Hall the Ohm diffusion is negligible. We shall work in the limit βi ≪ 1 ≪ βe and thus neglect the ambipolar and Ohm diffusion and retain only the non-ideal Hall term in the induction equation (4). Note that in the absence of Hall term, the induction equation (4) is invariant under the sign reversal of the magnetic field, i.e. B → −B. However, the presence of Hall breaks this symmetry as the electrons and ions (and the neutrals if the plasma is partially ionized) become two uncoupled fluid with the unmagnetized ions (and neutrals) carrying the inertia of the fluid and the magnetized electrons carrying the current. It is well known that the sign change of the magnetic field affects the way angular momentum is transported in the Hall-dominated region of the accretion discs (Wardle 1999). Within the Hall scale (Pandey & Wardle 2008)   \begin{equation} L{_{\rm H}} = \frac{v_{\rm A}}{\omega {_{\rm H}}}, \end{equation} (12)the ions, unlike in the ideal MHD, are weakly coupled to the magnetic field (due to their frequent collision with the neutrals) and thus do not feel the magnetic tension force. As a result, it is only the magnetized electrons that affect the onset of the KH instability in the super-Alfvénic flows when the Hall scale is greater than the fluctuation wavelength. The ions in this case provide only the neutralizing background. However, when the fluctuation wavelength is larger than the Hall scale, the weakly magnetized ions cause novel low frequency KH mode in the sub-Alfvénic flows. This new mode is akin to the well-known electrostatic ion-cyclotron instability in the fully ionized plasmas (Merlino 2002). Defining following momentum flux and magnetic flux tensors   \begin{eqnarray} {\bf \Pi } &=& p\,{\bf I} + \rho \,{{{\bf v}}\,{{\bf v}}} + \frac{1}{4\,\pi }\Big [\frac{{{\bf B}}^2}{2}\,{\bf I} - \left({{\bf B}}\cdot \nabla \right){{\bf B}}\Big ] \nonumber \\ {\bf M} &=& \left({{\bf v}}+ \boldsymbol {v}_B\right)\,{{\bf B}}- {{\bf B}}\,\left({{\bf v}}+ \boldsymbol {v}_B\right), \end{eqnarray} (13)the momentum and inductions (equations 3 and 4) can be written in the following conservative form:  \begin{equation} \frac{\partial \left(\rho \,{{\bf v}}\right)}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot {\bf \Pi } = 0\, \end{equation} (14)  \begin{equation} \frac{\partial {{\bf B}}}{\partial t}+ \nabla \cdot {\bf M} = 0. \end{equation} (15)The surface of flow discontinuity requires that the certain conditions must be satisfied across the surface. Thus, considering an element of the surface in the rest frame of the fluid, from equations (2) and (14) one gets (Landau & Lifshitz 1963)   \begin{equation} \big [\rho \,v_n\big ] = 0, \end{equation} (16)  \begin{eqnarray} \big [p + \rho \,v_n^2 + \left({{\bf B}}_t^2 - {{\bf B}}_n^2\right)/8\,\pi \big ] &=& 0, \nonumber \\ \big [\rho \,v_n\,{{\bf v}}_t - \frac{B_n\,{{\bf B}}_t}{4\,\pi }\big ]&=& 0. \end{eqnarray} (17)where the subscripts n and t pertain to the components normal and tangent to the surface and [f] denotes the discontinuity in f across the surface. It is customary to use Ohm’s law and infer the final boundary condition from   \begin{equation} \big [B_n] = 0, \end{equation} (18)and the continuity of the tangential component of the electric field (Landau & Lifshitz 1963; Rosenau et al. 1979). Since the bulk fluid velocity v and the magnetic field B provide a direct description of the macroscopic behaviour of the medium in the MHD framework (Parker 2007), it is desirable to formulate the boundary conditions without any reference to the electric field. The necessity to think in terms of electric field near the surface of discontinuity probably emanates from our inability to put Ohm’s law in the conservative form (Mckenzie 1971). However, as we see from equation (15) the generalized Ohm’s law can be easily written in the conservative form, and thus any reference to the electric field is unnecessary. The induction equation (15) gives the following jump condition   \begin{equation} \big [B_n\,\left({{\bf v}}_t + {\boldsymbol {v}_B}_t\right) - \left(v_n + {\boldsymbol {v}_B}_n\right)\,{{\bf B}}_t\big ] = 0, \end{equation} (19)which is identical to equation (4.7) of Rosenau et al (1979). The boundary conditions, equations (16)–(19) together with   \begin{equation} \big [J_n] = 0, \end{equation} (20)are the required boundary conditions in the Hall MHD. 3 DISPERSION RELATION Following TK65 and SC68, we shall assume that the surface of discontinuity in an incompressible, magnetized planer flow exists across the interface z = 0. The flow velocity vx(z) is assumed to have the following profile:   \begin{equation} v_x(z) = \left\lbrace \begin{array}{ll}v & \mbox{if }z > 0,\\ -v & \mbox{if }z < 0. \end{array} \right. \end{equation} (21)The mass density ρ has same value across the interface. A uniform magnetic field B parallel to the x-axis is assumed. After linearizing and Fourier transforming the equations as exp (ω t + i k x) , and applying proper boundary condition one gets the following dispersion relation (TK65, SC68)   \begin{eqnarray} {\left({\sigma _2}^2-{\sigma _1}^2\right)^2\,\omega {_{\rm A}}^2 + \left(2\,{\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2 + {\sigma _2}^2 + {\sigma _1}^2\right)\,\left(\frac{q_1}{k}\right)\,{\sigma _1}^2}\nonumber \\ \times\, \Big \lbrace \left({\sigma _2}^2+{\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2\right) + \left(\frac{q_2\,{\sigma _2}^2}{q_1\,{\sigma _1}^2}\right)\,\left({\sigma _1}^2+ {\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2\right) \Big \rbrace = 0. \end{eqnarray} (22)Here   \begin{equation} \sigma _j = \omega + i\,k\,v_j,\quad \quad \omega {_{\rm A}} = k\,v_{\rm A}, \end{equation} (23)and   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{q_j}{k}\right)^2 = 1 + \Big [\frac{\left({\sigma _j}^2+ {\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2\right)}{\sigma _j\,k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}}\Big ]^2, \end{equation} (24)and j = 1, 2. Note that the ideal MHD limit corresponds to the absence of Hall term, i.e. qj → ∞. The above expression for qj/k is quite complicated and needs to be simplified before making further analytic progress. Since the magnetic field in the Hall MHD evolves under the combined influence of fluid advection and field diffusion ($${{\bf v}}+\boldsymbol {v}_B$$), this opens up the possibility of approximating qj/k in the various limit. For example in the weak diffusive limit, when the fluid advection dominates the field diffusion,   \begin{equation} \left({\sigma _j}^2+ {\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2\right) \gtrsim \sigma _j\,k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}. \end{equation} (25)equation (25) can also be written in the following form   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\sigma _j}{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right) + \left(\frac{\omega {_{\rm A}}}{\sigma _j}\right) \gtrsim \left(\frac{\omega {_{\rm A}}}{\omega {_{\rm H}}}\right) \equiv k\,L{_{\rm H}}, \end{equation} (26)which provides the lower bound on the whistler (ωA ≪ σj) and the dressed ion-cyclotron (σj ≪ ωA) frequencies. In the weak diffusion limit we may approximate q/k as   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{q_j}{k}\right) \simeq \frac{\left({\sigma _j}^2+ {\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2\right)}{\sigma _j\,k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}}. \end{equation} (27) The dispersion relation (equation 22) has been analysed by TK65 and SC68 only in the weak diffusion limit for the super-Alfvén and Alfvénic flows. Not only the sub-Alfvénic flows were not considered in this limit but the other strong diffusion limit was completely ignored. Since it is well known that the Hall diffusion opens a new channel through which the free shear energy can flow to the waves (Wardle 1999; Pandey & Wardle 2012), we should anticipate similar outcome also in the present case when the plasma is highly diffusive. We shall assume that the shear flow profile is given by equation (21) and analyse the dispersion relation, equation (22) first in the weak diffusion limit. In this limit the dispersion relation reduces to the following simple form (SC68):   \begin{eqnarray} {\left(\omega ^2-\omega _0^2\right)\Big [\left(\omega ^2-\omega _0^2\right)^2 + 4\,k^2\,v^2\,\omega ^2\Big ] }\nonumber \\ -\, 4\,\left(k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}\right)\,{\omega {_{\rm A}}}^2\,k^2\,v^2\,\omega = 0, \end{eqnarray} (28)where   \begin{equation} \omega _0^2 = \omega {_{\rm A}}^2\left(M{_{\rm A}}^2-1\right). \end{equation} (29)In the absence of Hall term, equation (28) gives the usual KH mode if MA2 > 1, i.e. $$\omega _0^2$$ is positive. As noted in SC68, the square bracket term gives two pairs of stable modes. Near the marginal state, when MA = 1, the perturbative analysis suggests that the Hall will have destabilizing influence on the equilibrium (SC68). We rewrite the above dispersion relation, equation (28) in the following form:   \begin{eqnarray} { \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right)^2 \Bigg [\left(\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right)^2+\frac{M{_{\rm A}}+3}{2}\right)^2-\frac{5\,M{_{\rm A}}^4+8\,M{_{\rm A}}^2-3}{4} \Bigg ]} \nonumber \\ && -\,4\,\epsilon \, \left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)M{_{\rm A}}^2\,\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right)-\left(M{_{\rm A}}^2-1\right)^3=0, \end{eqnarray} (30)where in order to keep track of the sign of the magnetic field parameter ε = ±1 has been introduced. In the absence of Hall, the long wavelength limit, i.e. when ω/ωA becomes large, the above equation gives the usual KH mode   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right)^2 \approx \left(M{_{\rm A}}^2-1\right). \end{equation} (31)Clearly only super-Alfvénic (MA2 > 1) waves are unstable in this limit. The high frequency whistler (ωA ≪ ω)   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right) = \left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right), \end{equation} (32)and the low frequency dressed ion-cyclotron (ω ≪ ωA)   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right) = \frac{1}{\left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)}, \end{equation} (33)waves are the normal modes of the Hall MHD (Pandey & Wardle 2008). In Fig. 1, we sketch the dispersion curves for the ideal and the Hall MHD. The thick solid line labelled ωA2 in the figure corresponds to the normal mode of the ideal MHD ω2 = ωA2. This line would have continued beyond k LH = 1 (thin dash-dot line) in the absence of Hall effect. However, due to the presence of Hall, the whistler [thick dashed line labelled (ωA k LH)2] and the dressed ion-cyclotron (thick dotted line labelled ωH2) appear beyond k LH = 1 in the fourth quadrat of the figure. We see that with increasing k LH, whistler becomes the dominant mode in the Hall MHD. To sum, the Hall effect lifts the degeneracy of the ideal MHD by introducing in an otherwise scale free (k LH = 1) plasma a scale, namely the Hall scale LH. Figure 1. View largeDownload slide A sketch of the wave propagation in the ideal and Hall MHD is shown in the above figure. The plot ω2 against ωA2 shows various curves corresponding to the Alfvén , whistler, and dressed ion-cyclotron waves labelled as ωA2 , (ωA k LH)2 and ωH2, respectively. Figure 1. View largeDownload slide A sketch of the wave propagation in the ideal and Hall MHD is shown in the above figure. The plot ω2 against ωA2 shows various curves corresponding to the Alfvén , whistler, and dressed ion-cyclotron waves labelled as ωA2 , (ωA k LH)2 and ωH2, respectively. The nature of the whistler and the dressed ion-cyclotron waves is quite different. While the whistler is caused by the balance between the fluid inertia and the magnetic tension force (like in the MHD), the origin of the dressed ion-cyclotron wave is electrostatic, i.e. when the magnetic fluctuations are unimportant. Since for the KH mode k v ∼ ω, these two modes operate in two distinct Alfvén –Mach parameter space MA ≫ 1 and MA ≪ 1, respectively. Therefore, the onset of the KH instability in the super- and sub-Alfvénic regions will follow quite distinct path. The whistlers have a circular structure (Bellan 2013)   \begin{equation} \!\left(\frac{\omega }{k}\right)\delta {{\bf B}}\sim \eta {_{\rm H}}\,{\nabla {\times }}\delta {{\bf B}}, \end{equation} (34)and the frozen-in condition relates δB to ∇ × δv (Pandey & Wardle 2008). As a result, when the circularly polarized whistlers have the same orientation as the fluid vorticity, the instability grows at a higher rate than the corresponding ideal MHD growth rate. In the low-frequency limit, the dressed ion response time (ω−1 ∼ 1/(k v)) is much faster than the Alfvén crossing time, and thus the magnetic fluctuations are unimportant (δv/vA ≫ δB/B). The dressed ions undergo acoustic type oscillation which in the presence of sub-Alfvénic flow extract the shear flow energy over ω−1. Since the low-frequency (ω ≪ ωA) limit implies MA ≪ 1, balancing the dominant Hall term with the last term in equation (30) yields   \begin{equation} \omega \approx \frac{\omega {_{\rm H}}}{4\,M{_{\rm A}}^2}, \end{equation} (35)implying that the instability may grow quite rapidly over the dynamical time-scale. Clearly, the Hall diffusion of the magnetic field opens up a new channel through which the shear flow energy is fed to the waves. When MA = 1, in the absence of the Hall term, the dispersion relation, equation (30) gives the oscillatory Alfvén modes ω = ±2 i ωAA. However, if the Hall term is retained in the dispersion relation as a small perturbative correction, the mode becomes unstable with the growth rate (SC68)   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right) \approx \left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)^{1/3}\equiv \left(\frac{k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}}{\omega {_{\rm A}}}\right)^{1/3}. \end{equation} (36)Therefore, in the weak diffusion limit irrespective of the nature of the shear flow, the presence of Hall always destabilizes the fluid. The high-frequency whistler (when the electron dynamics is important) is destabilized by the super-Alfvénic flows, and the weakly magnetized ions provide just the neutralizing background. The low-frequency ion-cyclotron wave on the other hand is destabilized by the sub-Alfvénic shear flows over the ion dynamical time-scale. We numerically solve the dispersion relation, equation (30), and plot the result in Fig. 2. The growth rate of the KH instability (in the units of Alfvén frequency ωA) against k LH for various Alfvén –Mach numbers MA = 2, 0.5, and 0.1 is shown in the figure. We notice that when the flow is super-Alfvénic, the growth rate of the purely growing KH mode increases in the presence of Hall effect. For example, the growth rate of the KH instability, which in the MHD flows is 1.73 ωA (equation 31) for MA = 2 now becomes ≳3 ωA. In the Alfvénic (MA = 1) and sub-Alfvénic (MA = 0.5 , 0.1) flows, the KH instability is entirely due to the Hall effect albeit this purely growing mode appears only beyond certain k LH. Note the gap in the lower panels of Fig. 2. This suggests that only those fluctuations whose wavelengths are of the order of or smaller than the Hall scale are KH unstable in sub-Alfvénic flows. The fluctuations of larger wavelengths (smaller k) in this case are overstable. Figure 2. View largeDownload slide The growth rate (in the units of Alfvén frequency) against k LH for Alfvén –Mach numbers MA = 2, 0.5, 0.1 is shown in the above figure. The solid (dotted) curves correspond to the purely growing (overstable) waves. The mirror symmetric curves with the opposite sign of the Hall term (ε = −1) which is tantamount to inverting the sign of the magnetic field (with respect to the axis) is also shown in the figure. Figure 2. View largeDownload slide The growth rate (in the units of Alfvén frequency) against k LH for Alfvén –Mach numbers MA = 2, 0.5, 0.1 is shown in the above figure. The solid (dotted) curves correspond to the purely growing (overstable) waves. The mirror symmetric curves with the opposite sign of the Hall term (ε = −1) which is tantamount to inverting the sign of the magnetic field (with respect to the axis) is also shown in the figure. We also notice the presence of less rapidly growing overstable modes (dotted curves) in Fig. 2 with the growth rate about ∼1/3 of the purely growing KH mode. The presence of this mode is generic in the Hall MHD. For sub-Alfvénic flows, there are two overstable modes. One of the overstable modes appears only when |k LH| is confined within the small range (dashed curve). In its place a purely growing KH mode (solid curve) appears when |k LH| exceeds this range. The other overstable mode (dotted curve) is present at all |k LH|. The ratio of the real and imaginary part of the frequencies for MA = 2, 1, 0.5, and 0.1 is shown in Fig. 3. In the left lower panel of Fig. 3, this ratio is for the overstable mode appearing at all |k LH| in the sub-Alfvénic flows. The other overstable mode whose appearance is limited in the neighbourhood of small |k LH|, this ratio is shown in the lower right panel of the Fig. 3. Notice that with increasing k LH (i.e. with decreasing wavelength) the real part of the frequency increases. This implies that the Hall diffusion channels the shear flow energy more efficiently at the smaller (with respect to the Hall scale) wavelengths than at the longer wavelengths. Figure 3. View largeDownload slide The ratio of the real and imaginary parts, ωr/ωi against k LH is shown for the overstable modes of Fig. 2. The label against the curves are for the various Alfvén –Mach numbers. The symmetric curves are for the flipped Hall signs. Figure 3. View largeDownload slide The ratio of the real and imaginary parts, ωr/ωi against k LH is shown for the overstable modes of Fig. 2. The label against the curves are for the various Alfvén –Mach numbers. The symmetric curves are for the flipped Hall signs. To summarize, we see that (a) the growth rate of the KH instability increases with the increasing k LH, i.e. when the Hall dynamics becomes important; (b) the shear flows which are otherwise KH stable without Hall become unstable; (c) the sub-Alfvénic flows also become KH unstable in the presence of Hall; and (d) a new overstable mode whose growth rate is smaller than the purely growing KH mode appears in the fluid. The curves in the figure are expectedly mirror symmetric with respect to the sign change of the Hall term in equation (30). In order to better appreciate the role of Hall effect and develop a physical understanding of the above results, we recast the dispersion relation, equation (28), in the following form:   \begin{equation} a\,\left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)^6 + b\,\left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)^4 -c\,\left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)^2-d = 0, \end{equation} (37)where   \begin{eqnarray} a &=& \big [\left(M_{\rm A}^2-1\right)^4 + 4\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm H}}\right)M_{\rm A}^2\big ], \nonumber \\ b &=& \big [\left(M_{\rm A}^2+1\right)^2-4\big ]\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm H}}\right)^2, \nonumber \\ c &=& \left(M_{\rm A}^2+3\right)\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm H}}\right)^4, \nonumber \\ d &=& \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm H}}\right)^6. \end{eqnarray} (38) In the low-frequency limit, dropping the last term above equation reduces to the following quadratic form:   \begin{equation} a\,\left(k\,L_{\rm H}\right)^4 + b\,\left(k\,L_{\rm H}\right)^2-c=0. \end{equation} (39)The maximum growth rate can be inferred by setting b2 − 4a c = 0, which yields   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega _m}{\omega _{\rm H}}\right) = -\frac{\left(M_{\rm A}^2-1\right)^2\big [\left(M_{\rm A}^2+3\right)+4\left(M_{\rm A}^2-1\right)^2\big ]}{16\,M_{\rm A}^2}. \end{equation} (40)The wavenumber corresponding to the maximum growth rate is   \begin{equation} k_m\,L_{\rm H} = \frac{\left(M_{\rm A}^2-1\right)^3\big [\left(M_{\rm A}^2+3\right)+4\left(M_{\rm A}^2-1\right)^2\big ]}{128\,M_{\rm A}^4}. \end{equation} (41) The maximum growth rate (dotted line) and the corresponding wavelength (solid line) are plotted against the Alfvén –Mach number MA in Fig. 4. It is clear from the figure that in sub-Alfvénic flows KH instability is due to the dressed ion-cyclotron wave becoming unstable. Since the dispersion relation (equation 33) suggests that these waves are suppressed with increasing k LH, we see the gradual tapering off of the KH instability with the increasing λm/LH. Figure 4. View largeDownload slide The growth rate (dotted line) and the wavelength (solid curve) against the Alfvén –Mach number MA is shown in the above figure. Figure 4. View largeDownload slide The growth rate (dotted line) and the wavelength (solid curve) against the Alfvén –Mach number MA is shown in the above figure. Note that we may also recast the dispersion relation (equation 28) as a cubic equation in $$M_{\rm A}^2$$ as   \begin{equation} M_{\rm A}^6 + b_2\, M_{\rm A}^4 + b_1\, M_{\rm A}^2-b_0 = 0, \end{equation} (42)where   \begin{eqnarray} b_2&=& \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)^2-3, \nonumber \\ b_1&=&4\big [1+\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)\,\left(k\,L{_{\rm H}}\right)\big ]-\big [\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)^2-1\big ]^2, \nonumber \\ b_0&=&\big [1+\left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)^2\big ]^3. \end{eqnarray} (43) Although the roots of equation (42) can be easily written down, we solve this equation numerically by varying ω/ωA for different values of k LH. The curve labelled 0 in Fig. 5 corresponds to the ideal MHD case while kŁ H = 0.1, 2 curves above the label 0 (below the label 0) are for the parallel (with respect to the x-axis) and antiparallel fields. The growth rate represented by the label 0 corresponds to the ideal MHD. In this case, only when the flow is super-Alfvénic , i.e. MA > 1, the fluid is unstable. Figure 5. View largeDownload slide The solution of equation (42) in terms of MA by varying ω/ωA is plotted when B is aligned parallel (antiparallel) to the x-axis, which corresponds to the positive (negative) sign of the Hall term. The numbers against the curve correspond to the different values of k LH. The curve labelled 0 corresponds to the ideal MHD case. The symmetric curves below the label 0 are for the B antiparallel to the x-axis, which flips the sign of the Hall term. Figure 5. View largeDownload slide The solution of equation (42) in terms of MA by varying ω/ωA is plotted when B is aligned parallel (antiparallel) to the x-axis, which corresponds to the positive (negative) sign of the Hall term. The numbers against the curve correspond to the different values of k LH. The curve labelled 0 corresponds to the ideal MHD case. The symmetric curves below the label 0 are for the B antiparallel to the x-axis, which flips the sign of the Hall term. In the Hall case, both the sub- and super-Alfvénic flows are unstable with the identical growth rate for the parallel and antiparallel (to the x-axis) magnetic field. When k LH = 1, 2, the waves are a mixture of the right circularly polarized whistler and left circularly polarized dressed ion-cyclotron. In this case, the KH instability is caused in equal measure by both the whistler and the dressed ion-cyclotron wave growth. However, when k LH = 0.1, the waves are predominantly dressed ion-cyclotron. Since, the flow across the z-axis is mirror symmetric, the flipping of the background magnetic field sign (and thus the resulting change of the Hall term sign) does not change the orientation of the polarization vector with respect to the flow vortex. Therefore, for both the super- and sub-Alfvénic –Mach numbers, the instability grows at the same rate. In the long wavelength limit, i.e. when ω/ωA becomes large, the growth rate asymptotically approaches ideal MHD limit (equation 31). This is not surprising given that in the long-wavelength limit, the effect of Hall diffusion on the magnetic field tapers off. Now, we approximate qj/k, equation 24), in the highly diffusive limit. In this limit   \begin{equation} \left({\sigma _j}^2+ {\omega _{\rm A}}^2\right) \ll \sigma _j\,k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}, \end{equation} (44)and qj/k = 1. Above equation implies that   \begin{equation} \sigma _j \ll k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}\,\quad \mbox{and}\,\quad \left(\frac{\omega _{\rm A}^2}{\sigma _j}\right) \ll k^2\,\eta {_{\rm H}}. \end{equation} (45)Note that the long wavelength (ωA ≪ ωH) waves are excluded in the highly diffusive limit due to above constraints. Only short wavelength (ωH ≪ ωA) fluctuations are permitted in this limit. The dispersion relation equation (22) with qj/k = 1 reduces to the following simple form:   \begin{eqnarray} &&\!\!\!\!{ \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)^6 + \left(M_{\rm A}^2+2\right) \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)^4-\big [\left(M_{\rm A}^2+2\right)^2-5\big ] \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right)^2, }\nonumber \\ && -\, M_{\rm A}^2\,\left(M_{\rm A}^2-1\right)^2=0, \end{eqnarray} (46)which expectedly gives purely oscillatory modes when the Alfveń–Mach number is zero, i.e. when there is no free shear energy in the system. However, for any non-zero Alfvén –Mach number the waves are unstable. For example, when MA ≪ 1, the above dispersion relation gives   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right) \approx \sqrt{M_{\rm A}}. \end{equation} (47)For MA = 1, the growth rate of the instability is   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right) = M_{\rm A}, \end{equation} (48)and for MA ≫ 1, the growth rate becomes   \begin{equation} \left(\frac{\omega }{\omega _{\rm A}}\right) \approx M_{\rm A}^{3/2}. \end{equation} (49)Similar trend is seen in the numerical solution of equation (46) in Fig. 6(a). Expectedly the KH instability grows more slowly in the sub-Alfvénic flows in comparison with the Alfvénic and super-Alfvénic flows. Figure 6. View largeDownload slide The growth rate ω/ωA in the highly diffusive limit is plotted against the Alfveń–Mach number MA. Figure 6. View largeDownload slide The growth rate ω/ωA in the highly diffusive limit is plotted against the Alfveń–Mach number MA. In Fig. 6(b), the growth rate is plotted against ωA for MA = 0.1, 0.5, 1, 2. We see that the growth rate increases with increasing ωA implying that the high-frequency (short wavelength) whistler fluctuations grows much more rapidly than the low-frequency ion-cyclotron fluctuations. This is not surprising given that the most efficient free energy transfer in the Hall-dominated plasma occurs at the wavelengths of the order of or smaller than the Hall scale. To summarize, in the highly diffusive limit, when the Hall diffusion of the magnetic field acts in tandem with the advection of the magnetic field by the fluid, any presence of shear makes the fluid unstable with the growth rate increasing rapidly with the increasing Alfvén –Mach number. 4 APPLICATIONS 4.1 Earth’s ionosphere Large wind shears have been observed in the mesosphere and the lower thermosphere over a wide range of latitude, longitude, seasons, and local times for the past five decades (Yue, She & Liu 2010). The wind shear often exceeds 70 m s−1 km−1 and can occasionally reach 150 m s−1 km−1. Presence of the wind shear in the mesosphere and the lower thermosphere may cause the KH instability which may seed the quasi-periodic sporadic E structures at the mid-latitude (Larsen 2000). As can be seen from the Fig. 7(a), at the lower and mid-altitude of the ionosphere the Hall diffusion coefficient (equation 11) is largest among the three (Ohm, ηO; ambipolar, ηA; and Hall, ηH; Pandey & Wardle 2008) non-ideal MHD diffusion coefficients. The Alfvén –Mach number is plotted in the lower panel (Fig. 7b) for the mean shear speed 100 m s−1 km−1 and the magnetic field strength B = 0.3 G. We see that the flow is super-Alfvénic below 110 km and Alfvénic or sub-Alfvénic beyond ≳110 km altitude. As the sporadic E structures occur at mid-latitude, both the super- and sub-Alfvénic flow may cause the KH instability. Thus, it is quite plausible that below 110 km the high-frequency whistler and above 110 km the low-frequency dressed ion-cyclotron waves may cause KH turbulence. Figure 7. View largeDownload slide The Hall (ηH), Ohm (ηO) and ambipolar (ηA) diffusion coefficients (cm2 s−1) and the Alfvén –Mach number, calculated for the shear flow velocity 100 km s−1 and B = 0.3 G are plotted against the height in panels (a) and (b), respectively. Figure 7. View largeDownload slide The Hall (ηH), Ohm (ηO) and ambipolar (ηA) diffusion coefficients (cm2 s−1) and the Alfvén –Mach number, calculated for the shear flow velocity 100 km s−1 and B = 0.3 G are plotted against the height in panels (a) and (b), respectively. The observed horizontal wavelength of the quasi-periodic plasma structures at the mid-latitude E-region is typically ∼10–15 km with the period ranging from ∼1 to 10 min (Larsen 2000). Thus, the Alfvén frequency for λ ∼ 10 km becomes ωA ∼ 0.1–0.001 s−1 and the diffusion frequency k2 ηH ∼ 4 × 102 s−1. Here, we have assumed ηH = 1013 cm2 s−1 and vA ∼ 103–104 cm s−1. Since the frequency of the quasi-periodic structures ranges from ∼0.0016 s−1 to 0.06 s−1, the plasma is highly diffusive since equation (44) is easily satisfied. Thus, assuming MA = 2 between 100 and 110 km (Fig. 7b), the growth rate of the KH instability (equation 49) for ωA = 0.001 s−1 is ∼0.03 s−1, i.e. about half a minute. Above 110 km, flow is slightly sub-Alfvénic (Fig. 7b), and the instability grows at a rate close to the Alfvén frequency 0.1 s−1, i.e. over a period of 10 s. All in all, it is quite plausible that the Hall effect influences the onset of the KH instability at the mid-latitude E-region and thus may act as a precursor to the other plasma instabilities. Future numerical simulations with realistic shear flow profiles in the presence of varying magnetic field will allow for the detailed comparison with the observations. 4.2 Solar atmosphere The upflows of hot plasma in Mm-scale granules and downflows of radiatively cooled plasma in a network of relatively narrow intergranular lanes characterize the solar surface convection (Nordlund, Stein & Asplund 2016). The magnetic field, which away from the coronal holes appears as the large-scale canopy over the photosphere, effectively couples various partially and fully ionized layers of the atmosphere. The upflows and downflows of the plasma in the magnetic flux tubes are subsonic, with the speed of the order of ∼0.1–1 km s−1 (Cheung & Isobe 2014). In order to estimate the Alfvén –Mach number in the photosphere–chromosphere, we adopt following power-law variation of the field with the neutral number density nn:   \begin{equation} B = B_0\,\left(\frac{n_n}{n_0}\right)^{0.3}, \end{equation} (50)where n0 is the number density of the neutrals at the surface (h = 0). The neutral number density, which varies with the height, is taken from the model C of Vernazza et al. (1981). Such a field profile captures the essential height-dependent features of the observed field in the flux tubes (Martinez, Lites & Skumanich 1997). It is clear from Fig. 8(a) that for the shear flow speed ∼1 km s−1, as the strong intergranular field (B0 ∼ 1.2 kG at the footpoint) decreases with height, the super-Alfvénic flow becomes sub-Alfvénic (dotted curve) in the lower chromosphere (∼700 km). However, Hall is the dominant diffusion mechanism only up until approximately this height (Fig. 1a; Pandey & Wardle 2013), and thus the KH instability will grow at twice the ideal MHD rate due to Hall effect (see top left-hand panel of Fig. 2). In the middle and upper chromosphere where the flow is sub-sonic, ambipolar diffusion dominants Hall (Fig. 1a; Pandey & Wardle 2013). In this region, waves may become unstable due to anisotropic damping by ambipolar diffusion. On the other hand the shear flow speed ∼0.1 km s−1 remains sub-Alfvénic in the entire photosphere–chromosphere (solid line in Fig. 8b). In this case, Hall may drive KH instability in the photosphere and lower chromosphere. Note that even in the sub-alfc ideal MHD flows, waves may become KH unstable if the magnetic field has a very weak twist, i.e. when additional free energy source is available in the fluid. Note that if the twist in the field is strong, sub-Alfvénic flows remain stable in the ideal MHD framework (Zaqarashvili et al. 2010, 2014). This is because the rolling up of the flow interface (corresponding to the direction of vorticity) is helped by the weak twist in the field; strong twist inhibits this rolling up. Therefore, weak twist in the magnetic field makes sub-Alfvénic flows in the ideal MHD unstable. However, in the absence of any such twist in the field, only Hall effect, which causes left and right circularly polarized waves, may help the rolling up of the interface. In this work no additional (to the shear flow) source of free energy is assumed and our focus here is on the role of Hall diffusion only. Figure 8. View largeDownload slide The Alfvén –Mach number for the shear flow speed 0.1–1 km s−1 and the magnetic field stength B0 = 1.2 kG (dashed curve) and 120 G (solid curve) at the base of the photosphere is plotted against height for the model C of the solar atmosphere (Vernazza, Avrett & Loser 1981). Figure 8. View largeDownload slide The Alfvén –Mach number for the shear flow speed 0.1–1 km s−1 and the magnetic field stength B0 = 1.2 kG (dashed curve) and 120 G (solid curve) at the base of the photosphere is plotted against height for the model C of the solar atmosphere (Vernazza, Avrett & Loser 1981). In Fig. 8(b), the Alfvén –Mach number, MA, is plotted against height assuming B0 = 120 G at the footpoint of the flux tube. In this case, since Hall is the dominant diffusion in the entire photosphere–chromosphere (Fig. 1b; Pandey & Wardle 2013), the KH instability will either grow at a faster (than ideal MHD) rate when the flow (v = 1 km s−1) is super-Alfvénic (dotted line) or drive the instability in sub-Alfvénic (corresponding to v = 0.1 km s−1) in the middle and upper chromospheres (solid line). The Hall scale is of the order of 1–10 km (Pandey & Wardle 2008; Pandey 2013), and thus we shall assume that the fluctuation wavelength is of the same order. This gives k2 ηH ∼ 4 s−1 for ηH = 1013 cm2 s−1. The Alfvén frequency is ωA ∼ 1 s − 1 for vA ∼ 0.1 km s−1. For the dynamical frequency ω ≲ 102 s−1 (Fig. 2; Pandey 2013), we see that the plasma is in the weak diffusion regime (equation 25). Therefore, in the lower photosphere, the growing whistler fluctuations may cause the turbulence and above the upper photosphere the dressed ion-cyclotron waves may cause the KH turbulence. The growth rate of this low-frequency KH instability (equation 35) is quite large. For example, for the typical value of MA ∼ 0.5 and ωH ∼ 102 s−1, the growth rate is ∼102 s−1. Clearly, the dominance of the Hall diffusion in the lower solar atmosphere may trigger the KH instability in both the upflows and downflows of the plasma along the narrow flux tubes irrespective of whether the flows are sub- or super-Alfvénic . Recall that the Hall instability may also be caused in the presence of shear flows (Pandey & Wardle 2012, 2013). However, whereas the Hall instability requires the presence of a transverse (to the magnetic field) shear flow, the present investigation of the KH instability is for the parallel/antiparallel field-flow geometry. 4.3 Protoplanetary discs It is not well understood how the planetisimals – the kilometre-sized precursors of the real planets – formed. It is believed that when the thin dust layer (which settles to the mid-plane due to the gravity of the protosolar nebula) in a protoplanetary disc becomes gravitationally unstable, planetisimals forms (Safronov 1969; Goldreich & Ward 1973). However, as the dust settles to the mid-plane, the shear velocity due to the Keplerian rotation of the disc increases and eventually the layer becomes KH unstable. The resulting turbulence in the disc will diffuse the dust away from the mid-plane preventing its density from reaching the critical value required for the gravitational instability. Thus, shear-induced turbulence may prevent the formation of planetisimals (Weidenschilling 1980, 1984; Sekiya 1998). The mid-plane of a protoplanetary disc is often highly diffusive and the magnetic field may be poorly coupled to the field. The Hall diffusion could be important at the disc mid-plane only between 3 and 5 pressure scale heights for a mG field at 1 au (Figs 5 and 7; Wardle 2007) while at 5 au it becomes important much closer (≳1 scale height) to the disc mid-plane (figs 10 and 11; Wardle 2007). For stronger magnetic field, B ∼ 0.1–0.01 G, Hall dominates all other non-ideal MHD diffusive processes at 5 au near the disc mid-plane. Assuming the gas density distribution for a minimum mass solar nebula   \begin{equation} \rho _g=2.8\times 10^{-11}\,\left(\frac{R}{5\,\mbox{{au}}}\right)^{-11/4}\,{\rm g}\,\mbox{cm}^{-3}, \end{equation} (51)one gets for B = 0.1 G , vA ≃ 0.1 km s−1. Equating the disc scale height   \begin{equation} h = 0.35\,\left(\frac{R}{5\,\mbox{AU}}\right)^{5/4}\,\mbox{{au}}, \end{equation} (52)with the k−1, we get the Alfvén frequency ωA ∼ 10−7 s−1. For typical value of ηH ∼ 1014 cm2 s−1 (fig. 4; Wardle 2007) and assuming that ω is of the order of the disc dynamical frequency ΩK ∼ 10−8 s−1, we see that the disc is highly diffusive as equa-tion (44) is easily satisfied. Thus, the KH instability growth rate in the disc depends on the Alfvén –Mach number. For example when the flow is Alfvénic , the instability growth rate is ω = ωA ∼ 10−7 s−1. Therefore, over the disc dynamical time-scale, the Hall diffusion, irrespective of the nature of the shear flow, may destabilize the disc. The ensuing turbulent mixing of the material could further slow down the planet formation. 4.4 Molecular clouds Molecular clouds are the sites of star formation. It is believed that the star formation is associated with an intrinsic scale over which the gravitational collapse of massive cloud complex occurs (Larson 1995). This intrinsic scale possibly depicts the size of the molecular cloud cores of the diametre ∼0.1 pc, the ambient temperature 10 K, number density ∼104 cm−3, and line width ∼0.5 km s−1 (Myers 1994). Since the cloud core is embedded in the ambient molecular gas, it may suffer KH instability due to its relative motion with the surrounding. The time-scale of the hydrodynamic KH instability is much smaller (0.05 Myr) than the typical cloud lifetime, which is several tens of megayears (Kamaya 1996). The presence of mG field over several hundreds astronomical unit in the high-density (nn ∼ 108–1010 cm−3) region is inferred from the Zeeman splitting of OH and H2 O maser lines (Heiles 1987). The millimetre and far-infrared observations indicate the presence of large scale (0.1–10 pc) ordered fields (Tamura, Hough & Hayashi 1995). Although the fractional ionization of the cloud is quite low (∼10−4–10−8), the observed persistence of the turbulent motion in the cloud is often attributed to the presence of MHD waves (Arons & Max 1975). However, since the matter is largely neutral, the magnetic field may diffuse through the cloud. The profiles of various diffusivities in the cloud (Wardle & Ng 1999; Wurster 2016) suggest that the Hall dominates ambipolar and Ohm when the gas density is ∼1011–1014cm3. Taking ηH ∼ 1020 cm3 (Fig. 1; Wurster 2016) and the shear flow velocity (between the core and the gas) v ∼ 1 km s−1 (Kamaya 1996), we get the Hall scale LH ∼ 100 au for trans-Alfvénic flows MA ∼ 1. Thus, assuming k ∼ 1/LH, the KH growth rate in the highly diffusive limit is ω = ωA ∼ 10 − 10 s − 1 which translates to tKH ∼ 10−3 Myr. Note that this time-scale is much faster than the hydrodynamic time-scale tKH ∼ 0.05 Myr and much much smaller than the typical cloud lifetime. Clearly, the onset and the collapse of the molecular cloud cores will be affected by the presence of the Hall effect so long as it is not mitigated by other diffusive processes. Note that the above analysis completely neglects the presence of grains in the cloud. In dense cloud cores, charged grains are more numerous than the plasma particles and its presence affects not only the ionization structure of the cloud but also its gas phase abundances (Hartquist, Pilipp & Havnes 1997; Wardle & Ng 1999; Wardle 2007). Owing to the low ionization fraction, grains in the cloud are either neutral or carry ±1 − ±2 electronic charge (Nakano & Umebayashi 1980; Nishi, Nakano & Umebayashi 1991; Wardle & Ng 1999; Wardle 2007). Further, owing to the large mass and size distribution, the grains can couple directly as well as indirectly to the magnetic field (Ciolek & Mouschovias 1993). Therefore, the magnetic diffusion of the cloud will be severely affected by the grains. 5 SUMMARY This paper investigates the KH instability in the Hall MHD framework. The analysis has been carried out in two limiting cases: (1) weak diffusion limit, when Hall diffusion of the field is weak, and (2) strong diffusion limit, when Hall diffusion is the main cause of the field evolution. Following is the summary of the result. In the weak diffusion limit: 1. Both the super- and sub-Alfvénic shear flows are unstable due to the presence of Hall effect although the nature of the instability is quite different in two cases. 2. The high-frequency whistler waves are unstable in the presence of super-Alfvénic shear flows. The growth rate of the instability increases with increasing k LH 3. The low-frequency ion-cyclotron waves become unstable in the presence of sub-Alfvénic shear flows. The growth rate of the instability decreases with increasing k LH 4. A new overstable mode whose growth rate is smaller than the purely growing KH mode also appears in the fluid. In the strong diffusion limit: 5. The growth rate of the instability depends only on the Alfveń–Mach number and is independent of the Hall diffusion coefficient. 6. The growth rate linearly increases with the Alfvén frequency and has a smaller (in comparison to the Alfvénic or super-Alfvénic flows) slope for the sub-Alfvénic flows. Thus, the sub-Alfvénic flows grow at a slower rate than the super-Alfvénic flows. Acknowledgements It is my great pleasure to thank Prof. Mark Wardle for encouraging to investigate this problem and countless discussion on this subject. This research has made use of NASAs Astrophysics Data System. Footnotes 1 We shall use Hall effect and Hall diffusion terms interchangeably as they both mean one and the same thing REFERENCES Aburjania G. D., Chargazia K. Z., Jandieri G. V., Khantadze A. G., Kharshiladze O. A., Lominadze J. G., 2005, Planet. 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