39 research outputs found
Absence of Debye Sheaths Due to Secondary Electron Emission
A bounded plasma where the electrons impacting the walls produce more than
one secondary on average is studied via particle-in-cell simulation. It is
found that no classical Debye sheath or space-charge limited sheath exists.
Ions are not drawn to the walls and electrons are not repelled. Hence the
plasma electrons travel unobstructed to the walls, causing extreme particle and
energy fluxes. Each wall has a positive charge, forming a small potential
barrier or "inverse sheath" that pulls some secondaries back to the wall to
maintain the zero current condition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Figure
Magnetospheric Multiscale observations of magnetic reconnection associated with Kelvin-Helmholtz waves
The four Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft recorded the first direct evidence of reconnection exhausts associated with Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) waves at the duskside magnetopause on 8 September 2015 which allows for local mass and energy transport across the flank magnetopause. Pressure anisotropy-weighted Walén analyses confirmed in-plane exhausts across 22 of 42 KH-related trailing magnetopause current sheets (CSs). Twenty-one jets were observed by all spacecraft, with small variations in ion velocity, along the same sunward or antisunward direction with nearly equal probability. One exhaust was only observed by the MMS-1,2 pair, while MMS-3,4 traversed a narrow CS (1.5 ion inertial length) in the vicinity of an electron diffusion region. The exhausts were locally 2-D planar in nature as MMS-1,2 observed almost identical signatures separated along the guide-field. Asymmetric magnetic and electric Hall fields are reported in agreement with a strong guide-field and a weak plasma density asymmetry across the magnetopause CS
Self-amplification of electrons emitted from surfaces in plasmas with E x B fields
Emission from surfaces is known to cause enhanced wall heating and enhanced energy loss from plasma electrons. When E X B fields are present, emitted electrons are heated by the drift motion and cause enhanced transport along E. All emission effects are normally predicted to reach a maximum when the sheath becomes space-charge limited because any 'additional' emitted electrons return to the wall. But the returning electrons are also heated in the E X B drift, further enhancing transport, and return to the wall with extra energy, further enhancing the energy flux. Returning electrons can gain enough energy to induce secondaries, thereby self-amplifying to higher intensities. This newly analyzed mechanism could affect the wall heating, transport and global energy balance under certain conditions. Theory and simulations are presented