444 31 24MB
English Pages 674 [688] Year 1973
systems to note that
for curvilinear
convenient
sometimes
(v
\342\200\242 V)v =
iV(v
-
\342\200\242 V v)
X v)
X (V
where the operation is reduced to gradient and curl operations. Many useful identities of them are listed in P. M, can be proved Many using these operational properties. New Morse and H. Feshbach, \"Methods of Theoretical Physics,\" p. 114, McGraw-Hill, York, 1953.
volume and
surface
(V
III
mechanics a very the Gauss theorem,
In continuum
THEOREMS
INTEGRAL
is
integrals
. A) rfx
useful
integral
theorem
relating
=
closed volume V
(n \342\226\240 A) ds
II
containing
OF
PRINCIPLES
>S
surface
V
PHYSICS
PLASMA where
ft
=
unit
normal
vector
from
outward
the surface,
or
IfJaf^^'' 8xit integral
may
also
coordinates,
=
V
The surface
cartesian
in
JJ^^\"^^*
S
be written = JJ(A-n)rfi
Similar
relations
are valid for
scalars
and
tensors.
V
and
or
JJJ(V.T,rfx^JJ(n.T)rf, for
cartesian
JJ^\342\200\236rfi
coordinates. \342\200\2428Tu 1/ V
'- \342\200\242> Sc
S
Adler,
AND APPLIED PHYSICS
and Schiffer Introduction to General Berlin and Statistical Thermodynamics Introduction to Theoretical Mechanics
Becker Bjorken and Drell Bjorken and Drell Chodorow and Susskind Clark
Applied
Collin
Field
Evans
The
Feynman and Hardy
PURE
Bazin,
Allls and
Hall
IN
SERIES
INTERNATIONAL
Relativistic
Quantum
Relativistic
Quantum Fundamentals
Relativity
Mechanics
Fields Mechanics of Microwave Electronics
X-rays Theory
Atomic
of Guided Waves Nucleus
Hibbs
Quantum
to Electron The Principles
Introduction andPerrin
Harnwell Electricity Harnwell and Livingood
and
and Path
Mechanics
Integrals
Microscopy
of Optics Electromagnetism Atomic Experimental
Physics
Conceptual Development of Quantum Kinetic Theory of Gases Kinnard and Trivelpiece Ktall Principles of Plasma Physics of Modern Principles Physics Liighlon
Jammer
The
Lindsay
Mechanical Radiation
LMngston and Midelkton
Motso Mors* and
Mont
and
Particle Accelerators Blewett An Introduction to Statistical Communication
NtWton
Methods of Theoretical Physics Theoretical Acoustics Theory of Waves and Particles
Feshbach
Kinetic
lUad
Theory of Gases in Crystals
Dislocations
Rkhtmyer, Kennard, and
Rossi and
Olbert
Sohlff
Quantum
Introduction
Cooper
Introduction
to Modern Physics
to the Physics of
Space
Mechanics
^hwartz
Introduction
Sehwei'tx
Principles
StttM
Theory
Sound
and
Vibration
Ingard Scattering
Prtsint
Mechanics
to Special Relativity of Electrodynamics
Modern Theory of Solids Quantum Theory of Atomic Structure, Vol. I Theory of Atomic Structure, Vol. II Quantum Quantum Theory of Matter of Molecules: Quantum Theory Electronic Structure Symmetry and Energy Bands in Crystals: Quantum
The
Slettr SIttlii' Slatil'
Slalir Slatir
of Molecules and Solids, Molecules and
Theory of
Vol.
1
Solids,
Vol. 2 Slater
Insulators, Vol.3
Semiconductors,
Slater and
Frank
Introduction
Slatir and Frank Smytht Stratton Ttnkham
Tbwnes Wane fVhfti
and Metals: Quantum
to Theoretical
Theory
of Molecules and
Solids,
Physics
Mechanics
Static and Dynamic Electricity Theory Electromagnetic Theory and Quantum Group
Mechanics
Microwave Spectroscopy and Schawlow Solid-state Electronics to Atomic Spectra Introduction
Editor of the series from its inception in 1929 to his was Consulting late F, K, Richtmyer from 1939 to 1946; and G. P. Harnwell dMth 111 J939, Lee A. DuBildge was Consulting Editor I, Schiff served as consultant from 1954 until his death in 1971. from 1947 to 1954. Leonard The
OF
PRINCIPLES
PHYSICS
PLASMA
Nicholas
A. Krall of
Professor
University
Alvin
W.
Trivelpiece Professor
University
McGRAW-HILL
New York
London
St.
Louis
Mexico
Physics
of Maryland
BOOK
of
Physics
of Maryland COMPANY
San Francisco Dilsseldorf Kuala Lumpur Johannesburg New Delhi Panama Rio de Janeiro Singapore Toronto Sydney
Montreal
OF PLASMA PHYSICS
PRINCIPLES
1973 by McGraw-Hill, Inc. All rights reserved. \302\251 Copyright No part of this Printed in the United States of America. publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, without mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, of the publisher. the prior written permission
This
book
798765
KPKP
4567890
was
set in Times New Roman. The editors were and M. E. Margolies; and the production Thomas J. Lo Pinto. The line drawings were done
Jack L. Farnsworth
supervisor was by James S. Kempton. The
printer
Library
and binder was
of Congress
physics.
series in pure & bibliographies.
(International
Includes
1. 1931-
Plasma
QC7I8,K72
Data
1932-
of plasma
Principles
Inc.
in Publication
Cataloging
A
Krall, N
Kingsport Press,
gasos)
(Ionized
joint author, II. 330.4'4
ISBN 0-07-033346.B
I,
applied
physics)
Trivelpiccc,
Tide,
72-369.1
A. W.,
CONTENTS
xi
Preface
CHAPTER Part 1.1
TO
INTRODUCTION
1 One
Equilibrium
Plasma
and
Concepts
PLASMA
PHYSICS
1
3
Terminology
3
and Metaequilibrium
1.2 Debye Length
3
1.3
4
Parameter
Plasma
5
1.4 Distribution Function
1.5
Temperature
and
Other
Moments of the Distribution Function
Magnetic Pressure 1.7 Particle Drifts 1.8 Plasma Frequency 1.9 Waves in Plasmas 1.10 Landau Damping and Controlled 1.11 Plasma Stability Thermonuclear 1.12 Shock Waves and Solitary Waves 1.13 Collisions 1.14 Diffusion and Bohm Diffusion Radiation 1.15 Plasma
7
1.6
Part
Two
Plasma
7 9
9 12
Fusion
Production
Part
Three
Measurement
of Plasma
Properties
Current and Voltage Measurements in Plasmas 1.25 Plasma Probes of Plasma Properties 1.26 Other Methods of Measurement References
12 16 18
20 23 25
1.16 The Low-pressure Cold-cathode Discharge 1.17 The Thermionic-arc Discharge 1.18 Plasma Guns Alkali Metal Vapor Plasma\342\200\224QMachines 1.19 1.20 RF-produced Plasmas 1.21 Dense-plasma Focus 1.22 The Solar Plasma 1.23 Laser-produced Plasmas 1.24
6
27 27 30
33
33 37
39 39 41
42
45 50
54
CONTENTS
vi
CHAPTER
2.1
2
AND THERMODYNAMICS EQUILIBRIUM PLASMAS
STATISTICAL
MECHANICS
OF
55
2.6
Parameter Gibbs Distribution and Correlation Functions in an Equilibrium Correlations Plasma Two-particle Free Energy of a Plasma Equation of State of a Plasma The as a Fluid Plasma
63 65 66
2.7
The Ideal
67
2.8
Potential of a Test
2.2 2.3
2.4 2.5
The
Plasma
57
58 60
Plasma
Other Examples of 2.10 Coulomb Energy of 2.11 Discussion 2.9
Plasma the Plasma as a Fluid in a
Particle
68 70
a Plasma
74 76
Tl
References
CHAPTER 3 MACROSCOPIC PROPERTIES OF PLASMAS 3.1 The Distribution Function and the Liouville Equation 3.2 Macroscopic Variables of a Plasma 3.3 Macroscopic Equations for a Plasma; Fluid Equations 3.4 Two-fluid Plasma Theory 3.5 One-fluid Plasma Theory; Magnetohydrodynamics 3.6 Approximations Commonly Used in One-fluid Theory 3.7 Simplified One-fluid Equations and the MHD Equation 3.8 Properties of the Plasma Described and MHD Models by the One-fluid of a Plasma Described 3.9 Dynamic Properties by the One-fluid and MHD
78 79
82 84 88
89 92 95
98 Plasma
Theories
3.10 Double-adiabatic 3.11 The Dynamic References
CHAPTER 4.1
4.2 4.3 4.4
4.5 4.6 4.7
4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11
4.12 4.13 4.14
4
128
WAVES
Dielectric
104 I]8 J23
Theory Pinch
FLUID
IN THE
Constant of a
Plasma
Oscillations
Plasma
Oscillations
PLASMA
Field-free
Fluid
129
Plasma
Bo
= 0)
One-dimensional Drifting Plasma Waves in a Warm Plasma Space-charge in a Cold Plasma Plane Waves Microwave Method of Measuring Plasma Properties Transmission Plasma-column Resonances Waves in Finite Plasmas Space-charge Constant Plasma Dielectric of a Cold Magnetized (Eo = 0, Bo = Bo 2) in a Cold Magnetized to the Magnetic Field Waves that Propagate Parallel Plasma (Eo = 0,Bo = Boz) to the Magnetic Field in a Cold Magnetized Waves that Propagate Perpendicular Plasma (Eo = 0, Bo = Bo z) Wave in Typical Plasmas Frequencies in a Finite Magnetic Field Waves in Cold Finite Plasmas Space-charge Low-frequency Drift Waves in Nonuniform Plasmas in a
130 133 136
143 147 153
157 167 178 182
196 200 202
206 213
References
CHAPTER
Part 5.1 5.2
(Eo =
5 One
STABILITY
OF
The Plasma
The Equilibrium Classification of
FLUID
THE
Stability
Problem
Problem Plasma
Instabilities
PLASMA
215 215
217 218
CONTENTS
5.3 5.4
Methods of Stability Regions of Stability Part Two
Two-stream
5.6
Fire-hose
Part 5.7 5.8 5.9
Instabilities
Instability Three
220
Analysis
221
Stability of
5.5
from Macroscopic Waves
Plasma
Unconfined
of Space-charge Wave of an Alfven
Stability
of Magnetically
Fluid
221
Equations
222 228
Plasma
Confined
from
Macroscopic
Fluid
Equations
229
Stability of the Fluid Plasma Supported against Gravity by a Magnetic Fluid Confined Fluid Plasma from Stability of Magnetically Thermodynamic Considerations; Interchange Instability of Macroscopic Equations for the Study of the Hydrodynamic Stability
230
Stability
5.11
Energy Principle
5.12
Stability of a Plane Plasma-Magnetic Field of Self-confined Plasma (B,, Only): Stability Influence of Line Tying Stabilizing
of the
Normal-mode
Part
CHAPTER
Plasma
Supported
against
Gravity by a
Magnetic-field:
246
Analysis
251
Stability Theory and
Four
5.15 Open 5.16 Closed 5.17 Other References
Fluid
233
241
Plasmas
Confined Magnetically
5.10
5.13 5.14
VU
Plasma-confinement
Controlled
Interface:
Principle Analysis Energy Principle Analysis Energy
263
Fusion Research
Thermonuclear
Experiments
Plasma-confinement
265 267 275 281
Experiments
Plasma-confinement
257 261
Experiments
285 6
TRANSPORT
PHENOMENA
IN PLASMA
287
Coulomb Collisions 6.2 Deflection of a Charged Particle by Multiple Coulomb Collisions in a Fully Ionized Plasma 6.3 Fokker-Planck Theory for Transport Times in a Fully Ionized Plasma 6.4 Relaxation 6.5 Transport Properties of a Fully Ionized Plasma 6.6 Boltzmann and the Lorentz Model for a Weakly Ionized Transport Equation Plasma 6.7 Modified Boltzmann Equation Coefiicients in a Weakly Ionized Plasma 6.8 Transport
289
6.9
321
6.1
Binary
Ambipolar
Diff\"usion
Weakly Ionized Plasma in a
6.10
Transport
6.11 6.12
Magnetic Field of a Weakly Ambipolar Diffusion MHD Power Generators
Properties
of a
and
295 301
307 311
315 318
Homogeneous 327
Ionized
Plasma
across
References
A PLASMA FOR CHAPTER 7 KINETIC EQUATIONS 7.1 The Microscopic for a Many-body System Equations for a Many-body System 7.2 The Statistical Equations 7.3 Statistical Equations for a Coulomb Plasma the Chain of Statistical Equations 7.4 Closing Kinetic Equation in Zero Order\342\200\224^TheVlasov Equation 7.5 in First Order 7.6 Kinetic Equation of the Vlasov Equation 7.7 Properties to Order g 7.8 Equation Properties of the Kinetic References
Steady
291
a Magnetic
Field
333 340
347
349 350 351
355 357
358 359 360 366
367
CONTENTS
VUI
CHAPTER
8
THE VLASOV THEORY
8.1 The Vlasov 8.2 The Linearized 8i3
OF
368 368
Equations Vlasov
369
Equations
of the Linearized Vlasov a l-'iold-free Plasma Equilibrium
Solution of
WAVES
PLASMA
Equations
for
Electrostatic
Perturbations 371
Solutions for (^^(0 375 Derivation for Electrostatic Waves in a Plasma 8.5 Simplified 381 TKe Vlasov Theory of Langmuir 8.6 Waves, Ion-sound Waves, and Landau Damping 383 (Eo - Bo - 0) Function for Plasma Waves 391 8.7 Perturbed Distribution for Waves in a General Plasma Equilibrium 8.8 The Dispersion Relation 395 Wavesina 8.9 The VlasovTheoryof Small-amplitude Field-free Plasma Equilibi-ium\342\200\224 and Electromagnetic Waves [Eo = Bo = 0, /o = foiv^)] Electrostatic 398 Waves in a Uniformly 8>10 The Vlasov Theory of Small-amplitude Magncli/xd = f.oivi\\ Plasma [Bo = Boz, Eo = 0,/\342\200\236o 402 v\342\200\236)] Plasma 407 8.1 i The Vlasov Theory of Waves in Cold Magnetized to the Equilibrium Field in a 8.12 Waves That Propagate Perpendicular Magnetic Plasma Hot Magnetized Waves and (he (Eo = 0, Bo = iBo)\342\200\224Electromagnetic 8.4
8.13
Time-asymptotic
Bernstein Modes Waves That Propagate Hot
8.14
to the
Equilibrium
Magnetic
Field in a Magnc(i/cO
9. Ih) and Electromagnetic Waves (Eo = 0, Bo at an Arbitrary with Respect to the Propagating Angle Field in a Magnetized Hot Plasma (Eo = 0, Bq i Bu) Magnetic an Inhomogeneous [Eo = 0, Bo Magnetized Hot Plasma 2/Jo(a-),
Plasma\342\200\224Electrostatic
Electromagnetic Equilibrium
8.13
407 Parallel
Waves
in
tio-iio^x)]
in an Inhomogeneous Magnetized Waves Low-frequency Electrostatic Waves Nonlinear Electrostatic (BGK Waves) Waves vs. Vlasov Waves Fluid of Wavelike Vlasov States 8.19 Summary
8.16 8.17 8.18
Plasma
9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 9.9
9.10
THE
OF PLASMA
THEORY
VLASOV
439
STABILITY
442
Introduction of Monotone-decreasing Distribution; The Newcomb-Gardner of Multipeaked Distributions\342\200\224The Two-stream Instability
Theorem
of Multipeaked Distribution in Warm Plasmas\342\200\224Gentle-bump Mechanism of the Two-stream Instability The Nyquist Method and the Penrose Criterion for Stability Ion-acoustic Instability Theory Applications of Two-stream-instability Instabilities in Anisotropic Plasmas
Instability
Stability Stability Stability
Pinching
Electromagnetic
9.11 9.12
Discussion of
9.13 9.14
Loss-cone Instability Other Instability
9.15
Thermodynamic Bounds
Pinching of Anisotropic
Stability
463 476
478
482 483
Instabilities Instabilities
Magnetized
442 445 449 458 464
494 495
Plasma
497
505
Mechanisms on Field
Levels and Growth
Rates
in Unstable
Plasma
506 511
References
CHAPTER
10 THE AND
10.1
418 427
441
9
CHAPTER 9.2 9.3 9.4
417
432 437
References
9.1
414
Waves
The
Need
for
VLASOV
NONLINEAR
THEORY
INSTABILITIES a Nonlinear
Theory of Plasmas
OF PLASMA
WAVES
512 512
CONTENTS
10.2 10.3 10.4
10.5 10.6
10.7
10.8 10.9
in a Plasma Distribution Quasilinear Equations for Changes in Quasilinear Theory of Particles, Momentum, and Energy Landau Theory Damping in Quasilinear in Quasilinear Theory The Gentle-bump Instability Quasilinear Theory of the Two-stream Instability Electron Trapping in a Single Plasma Wave
514
518
Conservation
Wave
Plasma
Nonlinear
520 527
532
536 539 549
Echoes Interactions
Wave-particle
(Weak
Turbulence)
554
References
CHAPTER
11.1 11.2 11.3
11.4 11.5 11.6 11.7
11.8 11.9 11.10 11.11
11 FLUCTUATIONS, of a
Shielding
RADIATION
AND
CORRELATIONS,
556
Moving Test Charge
557
Field Fluctuations in a Plasma Plasma Electric Field Fluctuations in a Nonmaxwellian Waves Drag on a Test Particle; Emission of Electrostatic and Radiation Fluctuations Electromagnetic of Incoherent Radiation from a Plasma Density Fluctuations Scattering Emission of Radiation from a Plasma; Kirchhoff's Law from and in a Plasma Radiation Blackbody Radiation from a Plasma in a Magnetic Field Cyclotron (Synchrotron) from a Plasma Test Source Theory of Radiation of a Plasma Kinetic Equations Including Collisional Relaxation
563
Electric
568 570
573 575
588 590 592 595
599 605
References
APPENDIX 1.1 1.2
I
PARTICLE
MOTION
607
The Equations of Motion Particle Motion in Static Homogeneous
1.3
Particle Motion
1.4
Particle
Motion
in
608
Homogeneous
Homogeneous Magnetic Field [Bo i^ 0, E(0
Electric
and Magnetic
Electric
in a Homogeneous
Motion
Particle
Varying
Slowly
in a Static
Small-amplitude, 1.5
5^
608
Fields
and Magnetic Fields and a RapidlylVarying,
Electric
Field
Plane
Electromagnetic
618 Motion
Particle
in Static
Inhomogeneous Magnetic
Adiabatic Invariants 1.8 Plasma Properties from References
Orbit
APPENDIX II
OF
621
Fields
1.7
SUMMARY
627
628
Theory
630
III
SYSTEMS OF
UNITS,
FREQUENTLY
USED
OF
PROPERTIES
SOME
SOME INTEGRAL TENSORS, COORDINATES CURVILINEAR APPENDIX
VECTORS
CONVERSION
AND
AND
THEOREMS,
631
FACTORS,
AND 644
SYMBOLS
111.1 Systems of Units and Physical Constants 111.2 Conversion Factors III. 3 Frequently used Symbols
APPENDIX
613
,615
0]
Large-amplitude
Wave 1.6
IX
IV
SELECTED
ADDITIONAL
STUDENT
IV. 1 Turbulent Heating 1V.2 Plasma Shock Waves IV.3 Transport Theory IV.4 Hydromagnetic and Fluid
READINGS
644
647 647
FOR
THE
ADVANCED
654 654
655 655 Models
656
CONTENTS
Computer Techniques in Plasma Physics 1V.6 Normal Modes of a Plasma and Landau Plasma Equilibrium IV.7 and Stability IV.8 Plasma Oscillations IV.9 Solid State Plasmas IV.IO Applications of Plasma Physics to Space
656
IV.5
Damping
657 657
Physics
658 659 659
Name Index
661
Index
666
Subject
PREFACE
to provide
in and graduate students physics a comprehensive background in plasma for a two-semester course, normally taken physics. It was designed in the second year of graduate study by students who have completed the usual of graduate courses in classical and statistical electromechanics, sequence and mathematical methods. It is a basic introduction to the field magnetism, and assumes no background in plasma physics. it was intended as a Although it could be used for an advanced course by proper text, graduate undergraduate This
textbook
astronomy
selection
was
at the
developed
University
of
Maryland
with
of material.
The basic plan of the book is to begin with the exact statistical description of a. many-body system and then to obtain various reduced of the deseri^jtions called fluid theory,' or macroscopic plasmai slate. The most reduced description, a wide range of plasma first and is used to explore theory, is developed phenomena and involving equilibrium, waves, and instabilities. problems Macroscopic 6), are typically theory, together with transport phenomena in plasmas (Chapter of the course. covered in the first semester or Next, the book takes up a less reduced description, the Vlasov based on a continuous distribution function of velocity and microscopic theory, and again considers problems of plasma waves, configuration space, equilibrium, and instabilities, in addition to nonlinear of waves and the plasma interactions \" distribution. TJus Vlasov-Maxwell\" state description of the plasma predicts that depend on the details of the velocity-space distribution function, phenomena for Landau including, example, damping, velocity-space instabilities, velocity^ etc. The Vlasov results for these plasma properties are compared space diffusion, fluid treatment of the earUer with the results of the somewhat simpler chapters. and that fluctuations, radiation, being Correlations, depend phenomena on discreteness, are not included in either of the above reduced descriptions. these quantities. A test-particle approach is used to calculate Further discrete
fR\302\273l\302\253ACK
XU
of
properties
Ihe exact
plasmas
statistical
are obtained
from
leading
equations,
and caJculations of equations The theory of the orbits
transport of
reduced
higher-order
to the
for
coefficients
plasmas.
in static and time-
particles
single-charged
of
descriptions Balescu-Lenard
or
Folclcer-Planclc
with consistent magnetic fields is included as an appendix, our objectives of trying to be complete, and at the same time not devote extensive in many text space to treatment of topics that are simple and adequately treated available reference sources. readily One feature of this book is an extensive unique introductory chapter \" intended to eliminate the \"jargon gap that we found to be a major stumbling first encountering have block for students plasma physics. Most of our students of in but the mathematics and classical an adequate background physics, many and
electric
varying
the
who ohnpter
chapter Al
the equiUbrium
on
a
to
is
many-body calculates
chapter
seta the
stage
lltuations in that grasp
the
for
which
to
unfamiliar
a short
course
physics.
the field. statistical mechanics of student with the proper and the plasma state
problem the thermodynamic properties the rest of the book, which the plasma is not in a state
to four lectures) is useful to anyone feature is a unique of thi s The purpose
(three
As such it Another plasmas.
of plasma
perspective
as
a statistical
of the
equilibrium
deals
with
of
thermodynamic
the
physics
system. This plasma,
and
many realistic equilibrium.
books and review With regard to references, we selected papers primarily to students. we found of particular value It is our opinion that a proper of of the physics is the overriding to which the historical aspects concern, field are subordinate. a plasma have in the use of digital computers to simulate advances Recent considerable
provided
are
the
provide
are
physics
difficulty.
introductory chapter is really and concepts terminology of plasma a qualitative introduction desires to This
II^
with plasma
associated
concepts and the terminology them, creating an artificial
into
insight
where
included
they
plasma processes. Some simulation results a particular analytical result, extend
or
ampHfy
or
to a better understanding of plasma properties. in difficulty from routine There are many problems in each chapter, varying to challenging to well-known results problems manipulations leading algebraic obtain a better in research in plasma physics interested that will help the student feeling for this diverse and intriguing field. use is their units are used throughout this book, since Gaussian-cgs A conversion table from in the widespread physics research literature. plasma contribute
Gaussian-cgs units to electric
capacitance,
a list of cyclotron
the
A project large
most
frequency,
number
standard
practical
units for
etc., is included occurring symbols
field strength,
frequently
quantities such as III, Appendix as plasma (such in
resistivity,
along with frequency,
etc.).
as extensive of people.
as
this
text
naturally
involves the contribution
of
a
xm
PREFACE
We
the
in plasma thank our friends and colleagues physics with whom we and learned about this subject. We the students who took thank course at Maryland during the this book was being physics period in the development Their conscientious of the course help and advice textbook was very valuable to us. We are particularly grateful to Ted
worked
have
plasma
written.
the
and
Tidman, and Allan Kaufman a graduate to develop and teach benefited experience greatly from their previous We the advice, encouragement, and appreciate Derek
Northrop,
on
advice
how
to our
concentrate
our
on
which
chapters
Hans
particularly
Maryland,
are grateful
of
the
Ron Davidson, and
Chairman,
Howard
on teaching and developing is based. We appreciate the
manuscript
by Ron
their
course
efforts
book
this
Griem,
Department
early suggestions and in plasma physics. We in teaching plasma physics. of our colleagues at support
for
the careful
Davidson, Alan
Bob
Pechacek.
We
for allowing us to plasma physics course of one or more reading
Laster,
Seishi
DeSilva,
Hamasaki,
Klein, Paulett Liewer, Don Spero, Derek Tidman, and Maria Zales-Caponi. Our Marvin Schwartz, thanks and Mrs. Clara Rodriguez for their special go to Mrs. Mary Ann Ferg work in typing the various drafts of and to excellent the manuscript, Mrs. Barbara for preparing the Indexes. Hornady We are grateful to our wives, Terry Krall and Shirley for their Trivelpiece, this project. during patience and understanding John
Hey,
Walt
Jones,
Chris
Kapetanakos,
Hank
Nicholas A. Krall Alvin
W.
Trivelpiece
1
TO PLASMA
INTRODUCTION
PHYSICS
so is the study of charged collected in sufficient number particles physics is a factor in determining their the long-range Coulomb force statistical so that the force due to a near-neighbor properties, yet low enough in density is much less than the Coulomb force exerted by the many particle long-range It is the study of low-density ionized distant particles. The term \"plasma\" gases. was first used to describe a collection of charged by Tonks and Langparticles muir/ in 1929, in their studies of oscillations in electric discharges. However, of the plasma the most characteristic aspect of the state, the fact that because of the Coulomb force the charged exhibit a collective long range particles much first described behavior, was known earher, and was probably by Lord in in his of electron in the oscillations Thomson model 1906, Rayleigh,^ analysis Plasma
that
of
atom.
the
The term was coined gas
by
Crookes^
The
discharge.
is added
to a
state
\"fourth
W.
soUd,
term fourth it undergoes
' L. Tonks and ^
Lord
' W.
state
Lls^gniujr,
Croo]ii^s,PhiU,Trans.,
11:117
ionized
follows
matter
of
(1906).
(1879).
in
Ionized
the
Gases,
state,
state,
plasma
medium
from the
transition to a new
Oscillations 1:135
the
describe
a phase
Rayleigh;,PAi7:.!Ma^.,
to describe
often used
of matter,\" in 1879 to
created in a
idea that as usually
heat
hquid.
Phys, Rev., 33:195
(1929).
2
OF PLASMA
PRINCIPUKS
If heat
the
atoms.
state;
exist
to a liquid, it
is added
of
addition
The
this
PHYSICS
still
more
at temperatures
lower than
gas, and if
the
ionizing
energy
to the gas
a temperature above ionized state of matter is At
the
density
transition
a phase
undergoes
to the
gaseous
state.
results in the ionization of some of most matter exists in an ionized
100,000\302\260K
the
called
100,000\302\260K
is
low
fourth provided
enough
state. there
so that
A plasma state can is a mechanism for is
recombination
not
rapid. exists in a plasma state, 99.9 percent of the apparent universe little in the way of natural the low plasma here on earth because and high density of the earth and its near atmosphere the preclude
Although tliere
is very
temperature existence of
must be created by experimental plasma. This means that plasma in its the means study properties. However, upper atmosphere (ionosphere), does exist, created by photoionization of the tenuous atmosphere. plasma in the earth's the earth, plasma is trapped Fartlier out from magnetic field in the Plasma streams toward the earth from the near vacuum of space. sun (the of interstellar space, forming the medium solar wind), and fills many regions is viewed. tiirougli, which outer space the well-known Plasma physics generally involves physics of classical and nonrelativistic statistical mechanics. The meciianics, electromagnetism, of plasma challenge physics comes from the fact that many plasma properties are collective result from the long-range Coulomb interaction, and therefore that involve interacting simultaneously. many particles properties is a collection In its simplest form, a plasma of protons and electrons at are negligible. low density so that binary interactions gulTlciejitly (short-range) is the study of the properties of problem, Many-body theory, or the many-body a collection of protons and electrons When coexist such a medium. in an of this state are described by equihbrium equilibrium state, the properties with the appropriate Gibbs ensemble. most of the statistical mechanics However, to
of plasmas occur for nonequilibrium situations. in the United interest in plasma physics States began in 1952with of a program, then classified, known as Project the Sherwood,^ to attempts thermonuclear fusion reactor. Similar a controlled were develop programs and the U.S.S.R. at about the same time. These started in England, France, since that time, and now there are have grown substantially programs many in this field. the development nations with major research programs Although fusion reactor is one of the more challenging of a controlled practical apphcait is only one of the many areas in which tions of plasma physics, plasma physics a major role in the development Plasma physics has played of much a role. plays interesting
features
Revived
' A.
S.
Bishop,
\"Project Sherwood,\"
Addison-Wesley,
Reading,
Mass.,
1958.
TO PLASMA
INTRODUCTION
physics, and it is important in the study
of contemporary
areas as
atomic
astrophysics,
physics,
chemistry,
Hfe
of
in such
problems
molecular
sciences,
3
PHYSICS
physics,
power generation, and atmospheric physics. Plasma has its own and set of ideas. The main purpose vocabulary physics review on of this is to an a plasma physics elementary level, provide chapter of the field, of the sketch of the familiar background concepts identify many in discussing the plasma state, review some of the schemes terms used repeatedly and review some of the methods which is produced in the laboratory, by plasma which are measured. by plasma properties magnetohydrodynamic
PART ONE: 1.1
AND METAEQUILIBRIUM
EQUILIBRIUM term
The
used in
is often loosely
\"equilibrium\"
each
by a
described the
spectrum
of
emitted
The
electrostatic
is in
medium
energy at the
absorbs
at the
are neither
electrons
situations that
DEBYE
1.2
and
is blackbody. theoretical and experimental with
equilibrium
to describe
the ions and the electrons characterized by the same
In this situation, the
radiates
small
investigating
by
a plasma,
electrostatic field
their surroundings. will
eventually
electrons
charged
electrons
of an
isolated
are attracted
the rest of
and attracts
particle.
single
rate.
same
with
The
situations
same
in plasma
interest
nor
temperature
The term
be altered
of
in is used
metaequilibrium
by binary collisions.
LENGTH potential
from
are
equiUbrium
particle
of
q is
charge
0=^ In
describe
radiation
In many of the physics, the ions and thermodynamic
distribution
maxwellian
temperature.
its surroundings, and it
that
means
equilibrium
Thermodynamic
a the plasma particles colUde to
physics
plasma
until only quasi-steady-state condition that persists with each other. Frequently, plasma studies are made perturbations about such a metaequilibrium state.
parameter,
TERMINOLOGY
AND
CONCEPTS
PLASMA
The
potential
(1.2.1)
ion and shield its at rest repels in the vicinity This effect alters the potential at rest in a plasma of a charge is given by
the
ions.
to the
r
plasma.
vicinity
Similarly,
of an
an electron
4>
=^-e-'\"-\"
other of
(1.2.2)
a
4
OF PLASMA
FRJNCtPtES
where
is the
Ajj
PHYSICS
For an
electrolytes.
length originally defined in the
Debye
plasma
electron-proton
1/2
1/2
/rp^
\"-'
^'^rn^HW n =
where
density
T =
The
with
the
general,
to
respect
the
The
of the
sphere
1.38 x
10\"^*
of influence
depends on the
length
Debye
g indicates
is defined
and
sphere,
constant (=
ergs/\302\260K)
a given
of speed
the
of
number
iSi
pftraiweter
to
mean
the
tnergy uad the
plasma
kinetic
the
particles.
between
can
and
for
is treated
plasma
have a charge
density
of a
the description
in a Debye
of particles
The assumption g
=
(1.9.2)
'^ at rest repels inandtheimmobile vicinity is given
=^-e-'\"-\"
e=l-^
other of a ions,
by (1.2.2) (1.9.3)
TO PLASMA
INTRODUCTION
Problem plasma
a
from
The
Derive the dielectric electrons and stationary displacement of electrons. 1.9.1
ions
in (1.9.3)
given
the
by computing
field
a
for
arising
//// for electromagnetic
relation
dispersion
corresponding
as
constant
of cold
11
PHYSICS
a
in
waves
is
plasma
\"'
=
k^
(1.9.4)
-/^' than the
plasma frequency co^, the wave number is imaginary and the waves are evanescent. Above the plasma frequency (co > co^), waves propagate, and at very high frequencies, the free electrons of the plasma such as finite Effects a wave. size, only slightly influence the electromagnetic If
the
wave
frequency
magnetic
steady
co
field,
is less
or
this picture
modify
inhomogeneities
plasma
considerably.
In
a
homogeneous For
possible.
steady magnetic field a slow dispersionless example,
nethydrodynamic
wave,
called
an Alfven
below the ion-cyclotron
frequencies
Plasmas
or Nonuniform
in Magnetized
Waves
1.9.3
wave
electromagnetic
through the
wave, propagates with
frequency
result gradients.
wave
nnti is the mass density. As a second example, drift waves propagate of particle drifts and plasma currents This extra freedom introduced by in which motion
-i=
(1.9.5)
in inhomogeneous plasmas as a with plasma density
associated the
density
gradient
kT 1
k is
the Boltzmann constant, and
Plasma
1.9.4 These
at
p^ =
coK
where
or magplasma
speed
K^ =
where
are
motions
wave
additional
many
waves
Langmuir velocities
T is
m
aUows a
Vrir.
\"-k oic
new
(1.9.6)
tiQ
the temperature.
Waves
are
waves.
or if the
also known as They electrons
propagate have
waves,
space-charge
only an
if there
average
is a
electrostatic
velocity in the
waves, of
distribution observer's
electron frame.
or
12
by an CO
PHYSICS
described
are the previously
They
is
OF PLASMA
PRINCIPLES
initially displaced
=
CO,
+
The dispersion
of charge.
clump
at frequency
oscillations,
plasma
waves
these
for
relatiojQ
aroused
cOp,
icoi.
CO/ = C(j/
+
k^
m
(1-9.7)
r
The The
finite
is evidenced
dispersion
second
the
evidenced
by
valid only
when
the
to
the medium
causes
temperature
by the equation,
and
is weak,
absorption
be
both
at
vanishes
The absorption is
T-^Q.
X^^ =
.'j'~r'-''^'-v^;.:v\302\253^?i^c:^::.:h\342\200\236 =YB\342\200\236r-''sin
The values of
-> 00 /\342\200\242
(4.7.2)
nG +
sin E,\342\200\236,r
G
(4.7.3)
at by the boundary condition dielectric-vacuum interface
at a
the are
160
PRINCIPLES
that
the normal
PHYSICS
component
electric
the
of
component
OF PLASMA
the
These
#2
This
= 4>o{a)
determines
condition
of the
incident
bE, continuous at r
dr
dr ^j(a)
terms
sE) and tangential conditions are satisfied if
(with
a)
co'j
\\
(D =
displacement
continuous.
be
field
surface at r =
the plasma
of
Eg continuous
and A\342\200\236 and
amplitude
the potential
gives
=a
(4.7.4)
atr = a
(4.7.5)
inside the
in
plasma
frequency:
Ai =
1+
' (4.7.6)
=
{1+b)A\342\200\236
Thus the
field
that
s =
1
+
in the
n>2
0
becomes large (resonant) when the
plasma
is such
frequency
0, or co
=
(4.7.7)
^
The fact that the plasma resonates at s = \342\200\224 1 and not at s = 0 is a consequence of the cylindrical geometry 4.7.2). (see Prob. Since the plasma column is resonant at this frequency, the electrons in the column oscillate in response to the driving field. This motion reradiates, electric or scatters, Since the amplitude the incident field in cylindrical waves. of the at resonance, the scattered power motion of the electrons in the plasma is largest will at resonance. If the plasma column extends across a be a maximum is a maximum at resonance. coefficient waveguide as in Fig. 4.7.1, the reflection 4,7.1
Problem
Eg be continuous
Show that (in that
implies
Problem 4.7.2 Show that as above has a resonant mode Figure 4.7.3 shows there is more peaks
than one
in terms
the
also
a sphere at
resonances at
ca
that
condition
////
of plasma with the
co^^^
=
same
assumptions
////
cojy/s.
Many
of multiple resonances
However, the multiple time. The resonance
the
coordinates)
is continuous.
of this type of experiment. As can be seen, workers tried to explain the additional
results
resonance.
cylindrical
cj)
\302\253C0pl^j2
with
associated
remained (called
as an the
the
unsolved main
dielectric problem
resonance)
constant. for
a long
is correctly
WAVES
resonance
Main
O U
IN THE FLXJID
PLASMA
161
ui-^ui^/-/Z
>s
due to thermal
Scattering ^
waves
plasma
\342\226\240o
3 c
ldr interface. This requirement leads to the result that continuous at the plasma-vacuum the amplitude of the nth mode can be nonzero only if Again
are
interface
kaJ'\342\200\236{ka)
ka =-^
where This gives the warm
of the
Because
plasma.
are no other
that there
can
Equation (4.7.17)
main
at
frequencies
resonance
arbitrary of the
modes
be solved at n = 0,
modes
which
{-
1
=
0 can
there
V^,
plasma which also
(graphically or numerically) at the same frequency
-
^
= 0, V^,
satisfying
restriction
)
\\co/
co/
for
be excited in a no
is
a/Ap.
large
resonance
as the
guarantee
excited.
be
could
(4.7.18)
There is a in the cold
plasma,
(4.7.19)
/ y/
//V'/V*
)/
y
y y yi
i
^x'PA
a
FIGURE
r
4.8.4
Electric-field
there
is a net
a real
therefore
The maximum phase and is given by
for space-charge
magnetic E,
means
in turn
which
current,
perturbation
magnetic field, and these disturbances.
waves in a plasmafield for lowest azimuthally have a velocity p are zero, and electrons
distribution
charge-density
axial waveguide in an infinite symmetric mode. One-quarter cycle later to E^. distribution proportional
filled
power
electromagnetic of the
velocity
there flow,
waves
space-charge
a perturbed
is
with
associated
occurs
for
low
frequency,
lim
=
Uphase
.,