92 research outputs found
A self-organized criticality model for ion temperature gradient (ITG) mode driven turbulence in confined plasma
A new Self-Organized Criticality (SOC) model is introduced in the form of a
Cellular Automaton (CA) for ion temperature gradient (ITG) mode driven
turbulence in fusion plasmas. Main characteristics of the model are that it is
constructed in terms of the actual physical variable, the ion temperature, and
that the temporal evolution of the CA, which necessarily is in the form of
rules, mimics actual physical processes as they are considered to be active in
the system, i.e. a heating process and a local diffusive process that sets on
if a threshold in the normalized ion temperature gradient R/L_T is exceeded.
The model reaches the SOC state and yields ion temperature profiles of
exponential shape, which exhibit very high stiffness, in that they basically
are independent of the loading pattern applied. This implies that there is
anomalous heat transport present in the system, despite the fact that diffusion
at the local level is imposed to be of a normal kind. The distributions of the
heat fluxes in the system and of the heat out-fluxes are of power-law shape.
The basic properties of the model are in good qualitative agreement with
experimental results.Comment: In press at Physics of Plasmas, July 2010; 11 pages, 5 figure
Theoretical studies on rapid fluctuations in solar flares
Rapid fluctuations in the emission of solar bursts may have many different origins e.g., the acceleration process can have a pulsating structure, the propagation of energetic electrons and ions can be interrupted from plasma instabilities and finally the electromagnetic radiation produced by the interaction of electrostatic and electromagnetic waves may have a pulsating behavior in time. In two separate studies the conditions for rapid fluctuations in solar flare driven emission were analyzed
Formation and Evolution of Coherent Structures in 3D Strongly Turbulent Magnetized Plasmas
We review the current literature on the formation of Coherent Structures
(CoSs) in strongly turbulent 3D magnetized plasmas. CoSs (Current Sheets (CS),
magnetic filaments, large amplitude magnetic disturbances, vortices, and
shocklets) appear intermittently inside a turbulent plasma and are collectively
the locus of magnetic energy transfer (dissipation) into particle kinetic
energy, leading to heating and/or acceleration of the latter. CoSs and
especially CSs are also evolving and fragmenting, becoming locally the source
of new clusters of CoSs. Strong turbulence can be generated by the nonlinear
coupling of large amplitude unstable plasma modes, by the explosive
reorganization of large scale magnetic fields, or by the fragmentation of CoSs.
A small fraction of CSs inside a strongly turbulent plasma will end up
reconnecting. Magnetic Reconnection (MR) is one of the potential forms of
energy dissipation of a turbulent plasma. Analysing the evolution of CSs and MR
in isolation from the surrounding CoSs and plasma flows may be convenient for
2D numerical studies, but it is far from a realistic modeling of 3D
astrophysical, space and laboratory environments, where strong turbulence can
be exited, as e.g. in the solar wind, the solar atmosphere, solar flares and
Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs), large scale space and astrophysical shocks, the
magnetosheath, the magnetotail, astrophysical jets, Edge Localized Modes (ELMs)
in confined laboratory plasmas (TOKAMAKS), etc.Comment: 27 pages, 31 figures; review; accepted for publication in Physics of
Plasmas 202
Gravito-magnetic instabilities in anisotropically expanding fluids
Gravitational instabilities in a magnetized Friedman - Robertson - Walker
(FRW) Universe, in which the magnetic field was assumed to be too weak to
destroy the isotropy of the model, are known and have been studied in the past.
Accordingly, it became evident that the external magnetic field disfavors the
perturbations' growth, suppressing the corresponding rate by an amount
proportional to its strength. However, the spatial isotropy of the FRW Universe
is not compatible with the presence of large-scale magnetic fields. Therefore,
in this article we use the general-relativistic (GR) version of the
(linearized) perturbed magnetohydrodynamic equations with and without
resistivity, to discuss a generalized Jeans criterion and the potential
formation of density condensations within a class of homogeneous and
anisotropically expanding, self-gravitating, magnetized fluids in curved
space-time. We find that, for a wide variety of anisotropic cosmological
models, gravito-magnetic instabilities can lead to sub-horizonal, magnetized
condensations. In the non-resistive case, the power spectrum of the unstable
cosmological perturbations suggests that most of the power is concentrated on
large scales (small k), very close to the horizon. On the other hand, in a
resistive medium, the critical wave-numbers so obtained, exhibit a delicate
dependence on resistivity, resulting in the reduction of the corresponding
Jeans lengths to smaller scales (well bellow the horizon) than the
non-resistive ones, while increasing the range of cosmological models which
admit such an instability.Comment: 10 pages RevTex, 4 figures, accepted for publication in the
International Journal of Modern Physics
The Effect of Coherent Structures on Stochastic Acceleration in MHD Turbulence
We investigate the influence of coherent structures on particle acceleration
in the strongly turbulent solar corona. By randomizing the Fourier phases of a
pseudo-spectral simulation of isotropic MHD turbulence (Re ), and
tracing collisionless test protons in both the exact-MHD and phase-randomized
fields, it is found that the phase correlations enhance the acceleration
efficiency during the first adiabatic stage of the acceleration process. The
underlying physical mechanism is identified as the dynamical MHD alignment of
the magnetic field with the electric current, which favours parallel
(resistive) electric fields responsible for initial injection. Conversely, the
alignment of the magnetic field with the bulk velocity weakens the acceleration
by convective electric fields - \bfu \times \bfb at a non-adiabatic stage of
the acceleration process. We point out that non-physical parallel electric
fields in random-phase turbulence proxies lead to artificial acceleration, and
that the dynamical MHD alignment can be taken into account on the level of the
joint two-point function of the magnetic and electric fields, and is therefore
amenable to Fokker-Planck descriptions of stochastic acceleration.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
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