Electrostatic double layers and a plasma evacuation process.
Abstract
An evacuation process due to the growth of current driven instabilties in a plasma is discussed. The process, which leads to localized extreme density reductions, is related to the formation of electrostatic double layers. The initial linear phase is treated using the superposition of unstable plasma waves. In the long wavelength, non-dispersive limit, a density dip — which is initially present as a small disturbance — grows rapidly and remains localized in the plasma. The process works for a variety of plasma conditions provided a certain current density is exceeded. For a particular choice of plasma parameters the non-linear development is followed, by solving the coupled Vlasov-Poisson equations by finite difference methods. The evacuation process is found to work even more effectively in the non-linear phase and leads to an extreme density reduction within the dip. It is suggested that the growth of such structures produces weak points within the plasma that can lead to the formation of double layers.
- Publication:
-
Astrophysics and Space Science
- Pub Date:
- January 1981
- DOI:
- 10.1007/BF00642091
- Bibcode:
- 1981Ap&SS..74..189R
- Keywords:
-
- Electrostatics;
- Magnetohydrodynamic Stability;
- Plasma Density;
- Plasma Layers;
- Cold Plasmas;
- Finite Difference Theory;
- Nonlinear Systems;
- Plasma Waves;
- Plasma Physics;
- Finite Difference;
- Double Layer;
- Difference Method;
- Finite Difference Method;
- Plasma Parameter;
- Plasma