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Abstract

The staircase expansion is a new mathematical technique for deriving reduced, nonlinear-PDE descriptions from the plasma-moment equations. Such descriptions incorporate only the most significant linear and nonlinear terms of more complex systems. The technique is used to derive a set of Dawson-Zakharov or "master" equations, which unify and generalize previous work and show the limitations of models commonly used to describe nonlinear plasma waves. Fundamentally new wave-evolution equations are derived that admit of exact nonlinear solutions (solitary waves). Analytic calculations illustrate the competition between well-known effects of self-focusing, which require coupling to ion motion, and pure-electron nonlinearities, which are shown to be especially important in curved geometries. Also presented is an N-moment hydrodynamic model derived from the Vlasov equation. In this connection, the staircase expansion is shown to remain useful for all values of N $\ge$ 3. The relevance of the present work to nonlocally truncated hierarchies, which more accurately model dissipation, is briefly discussed. Finally, the general formalism is applied to the problem of electromagnetic emission from counterpropagating Langmuir pumps. It is found that previous treatments have neglected order-unity effects that increase the emission significantly. Detailed numerical results are presented to support these conclusions.

The staircase expansion--so called because of its appearance when written out--should be effective whenever the largest contribution to the nonlinear wave remains "close" to some given frequency. Thus the technique should have application to studies of wake-field acceleration schemes and anomalous damping of plasma waves.

Details

Title
Strong Langmuir turbulence and four-wave mixing
Author
Glanz, James
Year
1991
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
ISBN
9781392371978
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
303979699
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.