Magnetohydrodynamic stability of magnetars in the ultrastrong field regime II: The crust
Abstract
We study the stability of Hall MHD with strong magnetic fields in which Landau quantization of electrons is important. We find that the strong-field Hall modes can be destabilized by the dependence of the differential magnetic susceptibility on magnetic field strength. This instability is studied using linear perturbation theory, and is found to have typical growth time of order 103 yrs, with the growth time decreasing as a function of wavelength of the perturbation. The instability is self-limiting, turning off following a period of local field growth by a few percent of the initial value. Finite temperature is also shown to limit the instability, with sufficiently high temperatures eliminating it altogether. Alfv\'en waves can show similar unstable behaviour on shorter timescales. We find that Ohmic heating due to the large fields developed via the instability and magnetic domain formation is not large enough to account for observed magnetar surface temperatures. However, Ohmic heating is enhanced by the oscillatory differential magnetic susceptibility of Landau-quantized electrons, which could be important to magneto-thermal simulations of neutron star crusts.
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