Title: II' Plasma Physics Fundamentals
1II. Plasma Physics Fundamentals
- 4. The Particle Picture
- 5. The Kinetic Theory
- 6.
25. The Kinetic Theory
- 5.1 The Distribution Function
- 5.2 The Kinetic Equations
- 5.3 Relation to Macroscopic Quantities
- 5.4 Landau Damping
35.4 Landau Damping
- 5.4.1 Electromagnetic Wave Refresher
- 5.4.2 The Physical Meaning of Landau Damping
- 5.4.3 Analysis of Landau Damping
45.4.1 Electromagnetic Wave Refresher
5Electromagnetic Wave Refresher (II)
- The field directions are constant with time,
indicating that the wave is linearly polarized
(plane waves). - Since the propagation direction is also constant,
this disturbance may be written as a scalar wave
E Emsin(kz-wt) B Bmsin(kz-wt)
k is the wave number, z is the propagation
direction, w is the angular frequency, Em and Bm
are the amplitudes of the E and B fields
respectively. - The phase constants of the two waves are equal
(since they are in phase with one another) and
have been arbitrarily set to 0.
65.4.2 The Physical Meaning of Landau Damping
- An e.m. wave is traveling through a plasma with
phase velocity vf - Given a certain plasma distribution function
(e.g. a maxwellian), in general there will be
some particles with velocity close to that of the
wave. - The particles with velocity equal to vf are
called resonant particles -
7The Physical Meaning of Landau Damping (II)
- For a plasma with maxwellian distribution, for
any given wave phase velocity, there will be more
near resonant slower particles than near
resonant fast particles - On average then the wave will loose energy
(damping) and the particles will gain energy - The wave damping will create in general a local
distortion of the plasma distribution function - Conversely, if a plasma has a distribution
function with positive slope, a wave with phase
velocity within that positive slope will gain
energy
8The Physical Meaning of Landau Damping (III)
- Whether the speed of a resonant particle
increases or decreases depends on the phase of
the wave at its initial position - Not all particles moving slightly faster than the
wave lose energy, nor all particles moving
slightly slower than the wave gain energy. - However, those particles which start off with
velocities slightly above the phase velocity of
the wave, if they gain energy they move away from
the resonant velocity, if they lose energy they
approach the resonant velocity.
9The Physical Meaning of Landau Damping (IV)
- Then the particles which lose energy interact
more effectively with the wave - On average, there is a transfer of energy from
the particles to the electric field. - Exactly the opposite is true for particles with
initial velocities lying just below the phase
velocity of the wave.
10The Physical Meaning of Landau Damping (V)
- The damping of a wave due to its transfer of
energy to near resonant particles is called
Landau damping - Landau damping is independent of collisional or
dissipative phenomena it is a mere transfer of
energy from an electromagnetic field to a
particle kinetic energy (collisionless damping)
115.4.3 Analysis of Landau Damping
- A plane wave travelling through a plasma will
cause a perturbation in the particle velocity
distribution f(r,v,t) f0(r,v,t) f1(r,v,t) - If the wave is traveling in the x direction the
perturbation will be of the form
- For a non-collisional plasma analysis the Vlasov
equation applies. For the electron species it
will be
12Analysis of Landau Damping (II)
- A linearization of the Vlasov equation considering
- (since only contributions along v are studied)
- or, considering the wave along the dimension x,
13Analysis of Landau Damping (III)
- The electric field E1 along x is not due to the
wave but to charge density fluctuations - E1 be expressed in function of the density
through the Gauss theorem (first Maxwell equation)
- or, in this case, considering a perturbed
density n1 equivalent to the perturbed
distribution f1
- Finally the density can be expressed in terms of
the distribution function as
14Analysis of Landau Damping (IV)
- The linearized Vlasov equation for the wave
perturbation
- can be rewritten, after few manipulations as a
relation between w, k and know quantities
where
15Analysis of Landau Damping (V)
- For a wave propagation problem a relation between
w and k is called dispersion relation - The integral in the dispersion relation
- can be computed in an approximate fashion for a
maxwellian distribution yielding
16Analysis of Landau Damping (VI)
- For a one-dimensional maxwellian along the x
direction
- This will cause the imaginary part of the
expression
to be negative (for a positive wave propagation
direction)
17Analysis of Landau Damping (VII)
- For a wave is traveling in the x direction the of
the form
a negative imaginary part of w will produce an
attenuation, or damping, of the wave.