Abstract
The phenomenon produced by the Hopf bifurcations is of notable importance. In fact, a Hopf bifurcation—guaranteeing the existence of an unsteady periodic solution of the linearized problem at stake—is also an optimum limit cycle candidate of the nonlinear associated problem and, if non linearly globally attractive, is an absorbing set and an effective limit cycle. The present paper deals with the onset of Hopf bifurcations in thermal magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). Precisely, it is devoted to characterization—via a simple formula—of the Hopf bifurcations threshold in horizontal plasma layers between rigid planes, heated from below and embedded in a constant transverse magnetic field. This problem, remarked clearly and notably by the Nobel Laureate Chandrasekhar (Nature 175:417–419, 1955), constitutes a difficulty met by him and—for plasma layers between rigid planes electricity perfectly conducting—is, as far as we know, still not removed. Let $$m_0$$
m
0
be the thermal conduction rest state and let $$P_r, P_m, R, Q$$
P
r
,
P
m
,
R
,
Q
, be the Prandtl, the Prandtl magnetic, the Rayleigh and the Chandrasekhar number, respectively. Recognized (according to Chandrasekhar) that the instability of $$m_0$$
m
0
via Hopf bifurcation can occur only in a plasma with $$P_m>P_r$$
P
m
>
P
r
, in this paper it is shown that the Hopf bifurcations occur if and only if $$\begin{aligned} Q>Q_c=\displaystyle \frac{4\pi ^2[1+P_r(\mu /2\pi )^4]}{P_m-P_r}, \end{aligned}$$
Q
>
Q
c
=
4
π
2
[
1
+
P
r
(
μ
/
2
π
)
4
]
P
m
-
P
r
,
with $$ \mu =7.8532$$
μ
=
7.8532
. Moreover, the critical value of R at which the Hopf bifurcation occurs is characterized via the smallest zero of the second invariant of the spectrum equation governing the most destabilizing perturbation. The critical value of Q, in the free-rigid and rigid-free cases is shown to be $$\displaystyle \frac{1}{4}$$
1
4
of the previous value.