87 research outputs found
Electron cyclotron maser emission mode coupling to the z-mode on a longitudinal density gradient in the context of solar type III bursts
Copyright 2012 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. This article appeared in Physics of Plasmas 19, 110702 (2012) and may be found at .supplemental material at http://astro.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/sp.htmlsupplemental material at http://astro.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/sp.htm
The effect of electron beam pitch angle and density gradient on solar type III radio bursts
Copyright 2012 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. This article appeared in Physics of Plasmas 19, 112903 (2012) and may be found at .supplemental material at http://astro.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/sp.htmlsupplemental material at http://astro.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/sp.htm
Transverse oscillations in solar coronal loops induced by propagating Alfvenic pulses
The propagation and the evolution of Alfvenic pulses in the solar coronal
arcades is investigated by means of MHD numerical simulations. Significant
transverse oscillations in coronal loops, triggered by nearby flare events, are
often measured in EUV lines and are generally interpreted as standing kink
modes. However, the damping times of these oscillations are typically very
short (from one to a few periods) and the physical mechanism responsible for
the decay is still a matter of debate. Moreover, the majority of the observed
cases actually appears to be better modeled by propagating, rather than
standing, modes. Here we perform 2.5-D compressible MHD simulations of
impulsively generated Alfven waves propagating in a potential magnetic arcade
(assumed as a simplified 2-D loop model), taking into account the
stratification of the solar atmosphere with height from the photosphere to the
corona. The results show a strong spreading of the initially localized pulses
along the loop, due to the variations in the Alfven velocity with height, and
correspondingly an efficient damping of the amplitude of the oscillations. We
believe that simple explanations based on the effects of wave propagation in
highly inhomogeneous media may apply to the majority of the reported cases, and
that variations of the background density and Alfven speed along the loop
should be considered as key ingredients in future models.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A on 26 October 2004; 10 pages, 8
figure
The effect of initial conditions on the electromagnetic radiation generation in type III solar radio bursts
Copyright 2013 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. This article appeared in Physics of Plasmas 20, 062903 (2013) and may be found at .Extensive particle-in-cell simulations of fast electron beams injected in a background magnetised plasma with a decreasing density profile were carried out. These simulations were intended to further shed light on a newly proposed mechanism for the generation of electromagnetic waves in type III solar radio bursts [D. Tsiklauri, Phys. Plasmas, 18, 052903 (2011)]. The numerical simulations were carried out using different density profiles and fast electron distribution functions. It is shown that electromagnetic L and R modes are excited by the transverse current, initially imposed on the system. In the course of the simulations no further interaction of the electron beam with the background plasma could be observed
A new fast reconnection model in a collisionless regime
Based on the first principles (i.e. (i) by balancing the magnetic field
advection with the term containing electron pressure tensor non-gyrotropic
components in the generalised Ohm's law; (ii) using the conservation of mass;
and (iii) assuming that the weak magnetic field region width, where electron
meandering motion supports electron pressure tensor off-diagonal
(non-gyrotropic) components, is of the order of electron Larmor radius) a
simple model of magnetic reconnection in a collisionless regime is formulated.
The model is general, resembling its collisional Sweet-Parker analogue in that
it is not specific to any initial configuration e.g. Harris type tearing
unstable current sheet, X-point collapse or otherwise. In addition to its
importance from the fundamental point of view, the collisionless reconnection
model offers a much faster reconnection rate (M_c'less=(c/omega_pe)^2 /(r_L,e
L)) than Sweet-Parker's classical one (M_sp=S^-1/2). The width of the diffusion
region (current sheet) in the collisionless regime is found to be
delta_c'less=(c/omega_pe)^2/r_L,e, which is independent of global reconnection
scale L and is only prescribed by micro-physics (electron inertial length,
c/omega_pe, and electron Larmor radius, r_L,e). Amongst other issues, the
fastness of the reconnection rate alleviates e.g. the problem of interpretation
of solar flares by means of reconnection, as for the typical solar coronal
parameters the obtained collisionless reconnection time can be a few minutes,
as opposed to Sweet-Parker's equivalent value of < a day. The new theoretical
reconnection rate is compared to the MRX device experimental data by [Yamada et
al., Phys. Plasmas, 13, 052119 (2006), Ji et al. GRL, 35, 13106 (2008)] and a
good agreement is obtained.Comment: Final version, accepted for publication in Physics of Plasmas
(December 2008 issue
Two-component radiation model of the sonoluminescing bubble
Based on the experimental data from Weninger, Putterman & Barber, Phys. Rev.
(E), 54, R2205 (1996), we offer an alternative interpretation of their
experimetal results. A model of sonoluminescing bubble which proposes that the
electromagnetic radiation originates from two sources: the isotropic black body
or bramsstrahlung emitting core and dipole radiation-emitting shell of
accelerated electrons driven by the liquid-bubble interface is outlined.Comment: 5 pages Revtex, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Analytical Method for Joint Optimization of Ffe and Dfe Equalizations for Multi-Level Signals
Channel equalization is the efficient method for recovering distorted signal and correspondingly reducing bit error rate (BER). Different type of equalizations, like feed forward equalization (FFE) and decision feedback equalization (DFE) are canceling channel effect and recovering channel response. Separate optimization of tap coefficients for FFE and DFE does not give optimal result. In this case FFE and DFE tap coefficients are found separately and they are not collaborating. Therefore, the final equalization result is not global optimal. In the present paper new analytical method for finding best tap coefficients for FFE and DFE joint equalization is introduced. The proposed method can be used for both NRZ and PAM4 signals. The idea of the methodology is to combine FFE and DFE tap coefficients into one optimization problem and allow them to collaborate and lead to the global optimal solution. The proposed joint optimization method is fast, easy to implement and efficient. The method has been tested for several measured channels and the analysis of the results are discussed
Vlasov-Maxwell, self-consistent electromagnetic wave emission simulations in the solar corona
1.5D Vlasov-Maxwell simulations are employed to model electromagnetic
emission generation in a fully self-consistent plasma kinetic model for the
first time in the solar physics context. The simulations mimic the plasma
emission mechanism and Larmor drift instability in a plasma thread that
connects the Sun to Earth with the spatial scales compressed appropriately. The
effects of spatial density gradients on the generation of electromagnetic
radiation are investigated. It is shown that 1.5D inhomogeneous plasma with a
uniform background magnetic field directed transverse to the density gradient
is aperiodically unstable to Larmor-drift instability. The latter results in a
novel effect of generation of electromagnetic emission at plasma frequency.
When density gradient is removed (i.e. when plasma becomes stable to
Larmor-drift instability) and a density, super-thermal, hot beam is
injected along the domain, in the direction perpendicular to the magnetic
field, plasma emission mechanism generates non-escaping Langmuir type
oscillations which in turn generate escaping electromagnetic radiation. It is
found that in the spatial location where the beam is injected, the standing
waves, oscillating at the plasma frequency, are excited. These can be used to
interpret the horizontal strips observed in some dynamical spectra. Quasilinear
theory predictions: (i) the electron free streaming and (ii) the beam long
relaxation time, in accord with the analytic expressions, are corroborated via
direct, fully-kinetic simulation. Finally, the interplay of Larmor-drift
instability and plasma emission mechanism is studied by considering
electron beam in the Larmor-drift unstable (inhomogeneous) plasma.
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/movie1.mpg *
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/movie2.mpg *
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/movie3.mpgComment: Solar Physics (in press, the final, accepted version
An alternative to the plasma emission model: Particle-In-Cell, self-consistent electromagnetic wave emission simulations of solar type III radio bursts
1.5D PIC, relativistic, fully electromagnetic (EM) simulations are used to
model EM wave emission generation in the context of solar type III radio
bursts. The model studies generation of EM waves by a super-thermal, hot beam
of electrons injected into a plasma thread that contains uniform longitudinal
magnetic field and a parabolic density gradient. In effect, a single magnetic
line connecting Sun to earth is considered, for which several cases are
studied. (i) We find that the physical system without a beam is stable and only
low amplitude level EM drift waves (noise) are excited. (ii) The beam injection
direction is controlled by setting either longitudinal or oblique electron
initial drift speed, i.e. by setting the beam pitch angle. In the case of zero
pitch angle, the beam excites only electrostatic, standing waves, oscillating
at plasma frequency, in the beam injection spatial location, and only low level
EM drift wave noise is also generated. (iii) In the case of oblique beam pitch
angles, again electrostatic waves with same properties are excited. However,
now the beam also generates EM waves with the properties commensurate to type
III radio bursts. The latter is evidenced by the wavelet analysis of transverse
electric field component, which shows that as the beam moves to the regions of
lower density, frequency of the EM waves drops accordingly. (iv) When the
density gradient is removed, electron beam with an oblique pitch angle still
generates the EM radiation. However, in the latter case no frequency decrease
is seen. Within the limitations of the model, the study presents the first
attempt to produce simulated dynamical spectrum of type III radio bursts in
fully kinetic plasma model. The latter is based on 1.5D non-zero pitch angle
(non-gyrotropic) electron beam, that is an alternative to the plasma emission
classical mechanism.Comment: Physics of Plasmas, in press, May 2011 issue (final accepted version
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