1 research outputs found
Resonance Cones and Mode Conversion in a Warm Magnetized Bounded Plasma
The warm plasma resonance cone structure of the quasistatic field
produced by a gap source in a bounded magnetized slab plasma is
determined theoretically. This is initially determined for a homogeneous
or mildly inhomogeneous plasma with source frequency lying
between the lower hybrid frequency and the plasma frequency. It
is then extended to the complicated case of an inhomogeneous plasma
with two internal lower hybrid layers present, which is of interest
to radio frequency heating of plasmas.
In the first case, the potential is obtained as a sum of multiply
reflected warm plasma resonance cones, each of which has a similar
structure, but a different size, amplitude, and position. An
important interference between nearby multiply-reflected resonance
cones is found. The cones are seen to spread out as they move
away from the source, so that this interference increases and the
individual resonance cones become obscured far away from the source.
In the second case, the potential is found to be expressible as
a sum of multiply-reflected, multiply-tunnelled, and mode converted
resonance cones, each of which has a unique but similar structure.
The effects of both collisional and collisionless damping are included
and their effects on the decay of the cone structure studied.
Various properties of the cones such as how they move into and out
of the hybrid layers, through the evanescent region, and transform
at the hybrid layers are determined. It is found that cones can
tunnel through the evanescent layer if the layer is thin,
and the effect of the thin evanescent layer is to subdue the
secondary maxima of cone relative to the main peak, while slightly
broadening the main peak and shifting it closer to the cold plasma
cone line.
Energy theorems for quasistatic fields are developed and applied
to determine the power flow and absorption along the individual
cones. This reveals the points of concentration of the flow and the
various absorption mechanisms.</p