Self-consistent plasma heating and acceleration by strong magnetosonic waves for θ=90 °. Part I: Basic mechanisms
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3724042
ion cyclotronlongitudinal electric fieldpump waveadiabatic compressionion trappingstochastic ion heatingcyclotron harmonic waveslower-hybrid frequenciesone-dimensional, relativistic, fully electromagnetic, particleone-dimensional, relativistic, fully electromagnetic, particle simulation codeparticle viscositiesself-consistent effectssimulation codestrong heatingstrong magnetosonic wavesstrong wave dampingvery large ion accelerationwave overtakingwave-particle energy transfer
Recommendations
- Resonant ion acceleration by oblique magnetosonic shock wave in a collisionless plasma
- Theory for resonant ion acceleration by nonlinear magnetosonic fast and slow waves in finite beta plasmas
- Generation of a Nonuniform Transverse Ion Flow by a Propagating Electrostatic Wave in a Strongly Magnetized Hot Plasma
- Enhanced lower-hybrid heating caused by frequency modulation
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3873001
Cited in
(9)- Theory for resonant ion acceleration by nonlinear magnetosonic fast and slow waves in finite beta plasmas
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3873001 (Why is no real title available?)
- Turbulent heating and anomalous k spectrum in the quasilinear evolution of current-driven ion-acoustic instability in a magnetic field
- Wave heating at the third harmonic of the ion-cyclotron frequency
- Stochastic heating in ultra high intensity laser-plasma interaction
- Enhanced lower-hybrid heating caused by frequency modulation
- Resonant ion acceleration by oblique magnetosonic shock wave in a collisionless plasma
- Generation of a Nonuniform Transverse Ion Flow by a Propagating Electrostatic Wave in a Strongly Magnetized Hot Plasma
- Cylindrical Kadomtsev-Petviashvili equation for relativistically magnetosonic solitary wave in the collisionless plasma
This page was built for publication: Self-consistent plasma heating and acceleration by strong magnetosonic waves for θ=90 °. Part I: Basic mechanisms
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q3724042)