172 research outputs found
Jeans instability of interstellar gas clouds in the background of weakly interacting massive particles
Criterion of the Jeans instability of interstellar gas clouds which are
gravitationally coupled with weakly interacting massive particles is revisited.
It is established that presence of the dark matter always reduces the Jeans
length, and in turn, Jeans mass of the interstellar gas clouds. Astrophysical
implications of this effect are discussed.Comment: version accepted in ApJ, Nov. 1, 1998 issue, vol. 50
Particle-in-cell simulations of circularly polarised Alfvén wave phase mixing: A new mechanism for electron acceleration in collisionless plasmas
In this work we used Particle-In-Cell simulations to study the interaction of circularly polarised Alhén waves with one dimensional plasma density inhomogeneities transverse to the uniform magnetic field (phase mixing) in collisionless plasmas. In our preliminary work we reported discovery of a new electron acceleration mechanism, in which progressive distortion of the Alfvén wave front, due to the differences in local Alfvén speed, generates an oblique (nearly parallel to the magnetic field) electrostatic field. The latter accelerates electrons through the Landau resonance. Here we report a detailed study of this novel mechanism, including: (i) analysis of broadening of the ion distribution function due to the presence of Alfvén waves; and (ii) the generation of compressive perturbations due to both weak non-linearity and plasma density inhomogeneity. The amplitude decay law in the inhomogeneous regions, in the kinetic regime, is demonstrated to be the same as in the MHD approximation described by Heyvaerts & Priest (1983, A&A, 117, 220)
On the conical refraction of hydromagnetic waves in plasma with anisotropic thermal pressure
A phenomenon analogous to the conical refraction widely known in the
crystalooptics and crystaloacoustics is discovered for the
magnetohydrodynamical waves in the collisionless plasma with anisotropic
thermal pressure. Angle of the conical refraction is calculated for the medium
under study which is predicted to be . Possible
experimental corroborating of the discovered phenomenon is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, REVTeX, Accepted in Physics of Plasma
Three dimensional particle-in-cell simulation of particle acceleration by circularly polarised inertial Alfven waves in a transversely inhomogeneous plasma
The process of particle acceleration by left-hand, circularly polarised
inertial Alfven waves (IAW) in a transversely inhomogeneous plasma is studied
using 3D particle-in-cell simulation. A cylindrical tube with, transverse to
the background magnetic field, inhomogeneity scale of the order of ion inertial
length is considered on which IAWs with frequency are
launched that are allowed to develop three wavelength. As a result time-varying
parallel electric fields are generated in the density gradient regions which
accelerate electrons in the parallel to magnetic field direction. Driven
perpendicular electric field of IAWs also heats ions in the transverse
direction. Such numerical setup is relevant for solar flaring loops and earth
auroral zone. This first, 3D, fully-kinetic simulation demonstrates electron
acceleration efficiency in the density inhomogeneity regions, along the
magnetic field, of the order of 45% and ion heating, in the transverse to the
magnetic field direction, of 75%. The latter is a factor of two times higher
than the previous 2.5D analogous study and is in accordance with solar flare
particle acceleration observations. We find that the generated parallel
electric field is localised in the density inhomogeneity region and rotates in
the same direction and with the same angular frequency as the initially
launched IAW. Our numerical simulations seem also to suggest that the "knee"
often found in the solar flare electron spectra can alternatively be
interpreted as the Landau damping (Cerenkov resonance effect) of IAWs due to
the wave-particle interactions.Comment: Physics of Plasmas, in-press, September 2012 issue, final accepted
versio
MHD versus kinetic effects in the solar coronal heating: a two stage mechanism
presentation at SOHO17, Giardini Naxos, Sicily, 7-12 May, 2006, to appear in SOHO17 proceedingspresentation at SOHO17, Giardini Naxos, Sicily, 7-12 May, 2006, to appear in SOHO17 proceedingspresentation at SOHO17, Giardini Naxos, Sicily, 7-12 May, 2006, to appear in SOHO17 proceedingspresentation at SOHO17, Giardini Naxos, Sicily, 7-12 May, 2006, to appear in SOHO17 proceedingsUsing Particle-In-Cell simulations i.e. in the kinetic plasma description the discovery of a new mechanism of parallel electric field generation was recently reported. Here we show that the electric field generation parallel to the uniform unperturbed magnetic field can be obtained in a much simpler framework using the ideal magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) description. In ideal MHD the electric field parallel to the uniform unperturbed magnetic field appears due to fast magnetosonic waves which are generated by the interaction of weakly non-linear Alfv\'en waves with the transverse density inhomogeneity. In the context of the coronal heating problem a new {\it two stage mechanism} of plasma heating is presented by putting emphasis, first, on the generation of parallel electric fields within an {\it ideal MHD} description directly, rather than focusing on the enhanced dissipation mechanisms of the Alfv\'en waves and, second, dissipation of these parallel electric fields via {\it kinetic} effects. It is shown that for a single Alfv\'en wave harmonic with frequency Hz, and longitudinal wavelength Mm for a putative Alfv\'en speed of 4328 km s, the generated parallel electric field could account for 10% of the necessary coronal heating requirement. We conjecture that wide spectrum (10 Hz) Alfv\'en waves, based on the observationally constrained spectrum, could provide the necessary coronal heating requirement. By comparing MHD versus kinetic results we also show that there is a clear indication of the {\it anomalous resistivity} which is 100s of times greater than the classical Braginskii value
A mechanism for parallel electric field generation in the MHD limit: possible implications for the coronal heating problem in the two stage mechanism
We solve numerically ideal, 2.5D, MHD equations in Cartesian coordinates,
with a plasma beta of 0.0001 starting from the equilibrium that mimics a
footpoint of a large curvature radius solar coronal loop or a polar region
plume. On top of such an equilibrium, a purely Alfv\'enic, linearly polarised,
plane wave is launched. In the context of the coronal heating problem a new two
stage mechanism of plasma heating is presented by putting emphasis, first, on
the generation of parallel electric fields within an ideal MHD description
directly, rather than focusing on the enhanced dissipation mechanisms of the
Alfv\'en waves and, second, dissipation of these parallel electric fields via
{\it kinetic} effects. It is shown that a single Alfv\'en wave harmonic with
frequency Hz and longitudinal wavelength Mm, for a
putative Alfv\'en speed of 4328 km s, the generated parallel electric
field could account for 10% of the necessary coronal heating requirement. We
conjecture that wide spectrum (10 Hz) Alfv\'en waves, based on the
observationally constrained spectrum, could provide the necessary coronal
heating requirement. The exact amount of energy that could be deposited by such
waves through our mechanism of parallel electric field generation can only be
calculated once a more complete parametric study is done. Thus, the
"theoretical spectrum" of the energy stored in parallel electric fields versus
frequency needs to be obtained.Comment: Astron. Astrophys. (accepted, in press) (2006) - FULL pape
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