635 research outputs found

    Mirror instability in a plasma with cold gyrating dust particles

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    In this work linear stability analysis of a magnetized dusty plasma with an anisotropic dust component having transversal motions much stronger than motions parallel to the external magnetic field, and isotropic light plasma components is described. Such a situation presumably establishes in a shock compressed space dusty plasma downstream the shock front. Oblique low-frequency magneto-hydrodynamic waves (ω≪ωcd\omega\ll \omega_{cd}, ωcd\omega_{cd} being the dust cyclotron frequency) are shown to be undergone to the mirror instability. Consequences for nonthermal dust destruction behind shock fronts in the interstellar medium are discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figs, accepted to Phys. Pasma

    Self-consistent nonlinear kinetic simulations of the anomalous Doppler instability of suprathermal electrons in plasmas

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    Suprathermal tails in the distributions of electron velocities parallel to the magnetic field are found in many areas of plasma physics, from magnetic confinement fusion to solar system plasmas. Parallel electron kinetic energy can be transferred into plasma waves and perpendicular gyration energy of particles through the anomalous Doppler instability (ADI), provided that energetic electrons with parallel velocities v ≥ (ω + Ωce )/k are present; here Ωce denotes electron cyclotron frequency, ω the wave angular frequency and k the component of wavenumber parallel to the magnetic field. This phenomenon is widely observed in tokamak plasmas. Here we present the first fully self-consistent relativistic particle-in-cell simulations of the ADI, spanning the linear and nonlinear regimes of the ADI. We test the robustness of the analytical theory in the linear regime and follow the ADI through to the steady state. By directly evaluating the parallel and perpendicular dynamical contributions to j · E in the simulations, we follow the energy transfer between the excited waves and the bulk and tail electron populations for the first time. We find that the ratio Ωce /(ωpe + Ωce ) of energy transfer between parallel and perpendicular, obtained from linear analysis, does not apply when damping is fully included, when we find it to be ωpe /(ωpe + Ωce ); here ωpe denotes the electron plasma frequency. We also find that the ADI can arise beyond the previously expected range of plasma parameters, in particular when Ωce > ωpe . The simulations also exhibit a spectral feature which may correspond to observations of suprathermal narrowband emission at ωpe detected from low density tokamak plasmas

    Stable Electromyographic Sequence Prediction During Movement Transitions using Temporal Convolutional Networks

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    Transient muscle movements influence the temporal structure of myoelectric signal patterns, often leading to unstable prediction behavior from movement-pattern classification methods. We show that temporal convolutional network sequential models leverage the myoelectric signal's history to discover contextual temporal features that aid in correctly predicting movement intentions, especially during interclass transitions. We demonstrate myoelectric classification using temporal convolutional networks to effect 3 simultaneous hand and wrist degrees-of-freedom in an experiment involving nine human-subjects. Temporal convolutional networks yield significant (p<0.001)(p<0.001) performance improvements over other state-of-the-art methods in terms of both classification accuracy and stability.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted for Neural Engineering (NER) 2019 Conferenc

    Orientations of LASCO Halo CMEs and Their Connection to the Flux Rope Structure of Interplanetary CMEs

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    Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) observed near the Sun via LASCO coronographic imaging are the most important solar drivers of geomagnetic storms. ICMEs, their interplanetary, near-Earth counterparts, can be detected in-situ, for example, by the Wind and ACE spacecraft. An ICME usually exhibits a complex structure that very often includes a magnetic cloud (MC). They can be commonly modelled as magnetic flux ropes and there is observational evidence to expect that the orientation of a halo CME elongation corresponds to the orientation of the flux rope. In this study, we compare orientations of elongated CME halos and the corresponding MCs, measured by Wind and ACE spacecraft. We characterize the MC structures by using the Grad-Shafranov reconstruction technique and three MC fitting methods to obtain their axis directions. The CME tilt angles and MC fitted axis angles were compared without taking into account handedness of the underlying flux rope field and the polarity of its axial field. We report that for about 64% of CME-MC events, we found a good correspondence between the orientation angles implying that for the majority of interplanetary ejecta their orientations do not change significantly (less than 45 deg rotation) while travelling from the Sun to the near Earth environment

    A number-conserving linear response study of low-velocity ion stopping in a collisional magnetized classical plasma

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    The results of a theoretical investigation on the low-velocity stopping power of the ions moving in a magnetized collisional plasma are presented. The stopping power for an ion is calculated employing linear response theory using the dielectric function approach. The collisions, which leads to a damping of the excitations in the plasma, is taken into account through a number-conserving relaxation time approximation in the linear response function. In order to highlight the effects of collisions and magnetic field we present a comparison of our analytical and numerical results obtained for a nonzero damping or magnetic field with those for a vanishing damping or magnetic field. It is shown that the collisions remove the anomalous friction obtained previously [Nersisyan et al., Phys. Rev. E 61, 7022 (2000)] for the collisionless magnetized plasmas at low ion velocities. One of major objectives of this study is to compare and contrast our theoretical results with those obtained through a novel diffusion formulation based on Dufty-Berkovsky relation evaluated in magnetized one-component plasma models framed on target ions and electrons.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. E, 17 pages, 4 figure

    Stability of the Magnetopause of Disk-Accreting Rotating Stars

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    We discuss three modes of oscillation of accretion disks around rotating magnetized neutron stars which may explain the separations of the kilo-Hertz quasi periodic oscillations (QPO) seen in low mass X-ray binaries. The existence of these compressible, non-barotropic magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) modes requires that there be a maximum in the angular velocity Ωϕ(r)\Omega_\phi(r) of the accreting material larger than the angular velocity of the star Ω∗\Omega_*, and that the fluid is in approximately circular motion near this maximum rather than moving rapidly towards the star or out of the disk plane into funnel flows. Our MHD simulations show this type of flow and Ωϕ(r)\Omega_\phi(r) profile. The first mode is a Rossby wave instability (RWI) mode which is radially trapped in the vicinity of the maximum of a key function g(r)F(r)g(r){\cal F}(r) at rRr_{R}. The real part of the angular frequency of the mode is ωr=mΩϕ(rR)\omega_r=m\Omega_\phi(r_{R}), where m=1,2...m=1,2... is the azimuthal mode number. The second mode, is a mode driven by the rotating, non-axisymmetric component of the star's magnetic field. It has an angular frequency equal to the star's angular rotation rate Ω∗\Omega_*. This mode is strongly excited near the radius of the Lindblad resonance which is slightly outside of rRr_R. The third mode arises naturally from the interaction of flow perturbation with the rotating non-axisymmetric component of the star's magnetic field. It has an angular frequency Ω∗/2\Omega_*/2. We suggest that the first mode with m=1m=1 is associated with the upper QPO frequency, νu\nu_u; that the nonlinear interaction of the first and second modes gives the lower QPO frequency, νℓ=νu−ν∗\nu_\ell =\nu_u-\nu_*; and that the nonlinear interaction of the first and third modes gives the lower QPO frequency νℓ=νu−ν∗/2\nu_\ell=\nu_u-\nu_*/2, where ν∗=Ω∗/2π\nu_*=\Omega_*/2\pi.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure

    CMB anisotropies due to cosmological magnetosonic waves

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    We study scalar mode perturbations (magnetosonic waves) induced by a helical stochastic cosmological magnetic field and derive analytically the corresponding cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and polarization anisotropy angular power spectra. We show that the presence of a stochastic magnetic field, or an homogeneous magnetic field, influences the acoustic oscillation pattern of the CMB anisotropy power spectrum, effectively acting as a reduction of the baryon fraction. We find that the scalar magnetic energy density perturbation contribution to the CMB temperature anisotropy is small compared to the contribution to the CMB EE-polarization anisotropy.Comment: 17 pages, references added, version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    An Arbitrary Curvilinear Coordinate Method for Particle-In-Cell Modeling

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    A new approach to the kinetic simulation of plasmas in complex geometries, based on the Particle-in- Cell (PIC) simulation method, is explored. In the two dimensional (2d) electrostatic version of our method, called the Arbitrary Curvilinear Coordinate PIC (ACC-PIC) method, all essential PIC operations are carried out in 2d on a uniform grid on the unit square logical domain, and mapped to a nonuniform boundary-fitted grid on the physical domain. As the resulting logical grid equations of motion are not separable, we have developed an extension of the semi-implicit Modified Leapfrog (ML) integration technique to preserve the symplectic nature of the logical grid particle mover. A generalized, curvilinear coordinate formulation of Poisson's equations to solve for the electrostatic fields on the uniform logical grid is also developed. By our formulation, we compute the plasma charge density on the logical grid based on the particles' positions on the logical domain. That is, the plasma particles are weighted to the uniform logical grid and the self-consistent mean electrostatic fields obtained from the solution of the logical grid Poisson equation are interpolated to the particle positions on the logical grid. This process eliminates the complexity associated with the weighting and interpolation processes on the nonuniform physical grid and allows us to run the PIC method on arbitrary boundary-fitted meshes.Comment: Submitted to Computational Science & Discovery December 201
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